For the past two decades, Larry Gagosian has been by a wide margin the most powerful gallerist in the world.
By Eric Konigsberg
No one nailed the eighties quite like Bret Easton Ellis, author of Less Than Zero and American Psycho.
By Vanessa Grigoriadis
Here, highlights from the historic competition.
Secret protocols not included.
Too good to forgive.
Our roundup of news from around the city.
Unwelcome turns.
Sniping about Lou Reed with the vanguard composer and former Velvet before an orchestra-backed nostalgia-tour stop at BAM.
Why David Edelstein hates the Oscars.
Golden Globe winners take a moment backstage.
The Prototype festival took risks, some of which didn’t pay off—and all of which made it feel necessary.
Scott Brown on the knotty Cat on a Hot Tin Roof.
The showrunner of Enlightened would like to make you squirm.
Yes, Kate Middleton’s portrait is terrible. But she, and Britain, got exactly what they wanted.
Robin Rhode turns a gallery into a coloring book.
“I am not a tool of Rudy Giuliani,” says mayoral candidate Joe Lhota.
A first look at Cole’s Greenwich Village, opening this week in the old Lyon space.
A log carrier, flip wall clock, and more new stuff in stores.
“Everyone said, ‘You’ll move to New York City and meet someone amazing,’ but for every one straight guy, I meet ten gay ones.”
At Tribeca Canvas, the once over-the-top Iron Chef scales down.
Flavor-packed pink grapefruit from Florida reaches its peak in January.
It’s not just for dessert anymore.
The urbanite’s guide to a home with a hearth.
From boots and bags to candy and housewares, Scandinavian design is everywhere. No passport required.
Readers sound off on Elizabeth Wurtzel, SoulCycle, and more.
Our deliberately oversimplified guide to who falls where on our taste hierarchies.