

Hanya Yanagihara
Posts

Why Artists Rule New York
It’s home to all types, but one group has made the city what it is today.

Finding Your Family
For many, the bonds formed by choice can be as profound, as tortured, as those into which we are born.

Jewish Theatermakers Are in Good Company
So many of America’s great plays and musicals have been created and performed by Jews. T’s Holiday issue explores why — and gathers dozens of...

The Enduring, Transformational Power of Pilgrimage
The writer Aatish Taseer embarked on a journey through Bolivia, Mongolia and Iraq. What he learned was less a life-altering revelation and more a lesson...

The Burden of Inheritance
How do designers and artists continue the legacy of others without losing their own voice?

Can One Artist Do Everything?
Out of curiosity — or necessity — more creative people are trying their hand at multiple genres.

Why Travelers Should Seek Out Discomfort
Taking a trip has long been associated with pleasure. But there is nothing more bracing — and vitalizing — than immersing yourself in an unforgiving...

In T’s Spring Design Issue, Three Maximalist Homes Filled With Collections
It’s the objects in each of these spaces — as well as those in her own, T’s editor in chief writes — that bring the...

How Great Art Gets Lost — and Found Again
The rediscovery of forgotten works always comes with the realization that they have been with us all along.

In T’s Spring Women’s Fashion These Clothes Were Made for Strutting
This season’s everyday fashion was crafted not for lounging, T’s editor in chief writes, but for making a vibrant re-emergence.