T’s Summer Travel issue is dedicated to pasta in Italy, diving deep into the culinary traditions, regional variations and complicated history of the country’s national symbol.
"I will not back down from being a woman, from being black, from having an opinion. I’m running a company and that’s exactly what I came here to do." —
@Rihanna
on being the first black woman in charge of a major luxury fashion house in Paris
On the eve of her next album,
@SolangeKnowles
has hybridized her many talents — music, dance, activism, aesthetics — to inspire a new model for the modern pop artist
Jay-Z (
@S_C_
) is on the cover of our 2017 Holiday issue.
@nytimes
executive editor
@deanbaquet
sat down with the rapper to discuss politics, marriage, the state of rap — and being a black man in Trump’s America.
#TCookingClass
: Soups aren’t always the author Roxane Gay’s
@rgay
thing. But this tomato one, especially when paired with a grilled cheese sandwich, is just that good.
“I have this fear living in my body about releasing work,” says
@SolangeKnowles
. “I don’t know any artist that doesn’t feel that before they hit the send button.”
Natasha Lyonne (
@nlyonne
) and Chloë Sevigny got to know each other while making films in the late '90s, when they were both coming up as actresses. They've been inseparable ever since.
#TCultureIssue
.
@Antoni
, the food and wine expert on
@Netflix
’s
@QueerEye
, took T's challenge to make something in under an hour, and paid tribute to the late Anthony Bourdain:
These 32 American men, and their peers, are producing literature that is essential to how we understand our country and its place in the world right now
As the first black woman to run a major luxury fashion house,
@Rihanna
paid close attention to inclusivity when creating the
@FentyOfficial
clothing line
Ask any frequent traveler their rules for a trip, and you’ll likely hear the same advice: Never check a bag. But fitting everything you need into one small suitcase requires some ingenuity.
“A Game of Thrones” author George R. R. Martin has expanded the realms of genre fiction and prestige television — and forever changed how we engage with an imagined universe
#TGreatsIssue
"Without cutlery as mediator, we feel everything,"
@ligayamishan
writes. "The nerve endings in our fingers are triggered; our senses expand. We taste more."
As one of the few truly independent creative heads of a major brand,
@rickowensonline
has built an improbable empire by making clothes as grotesque as they are glamorous.
About a year ago, the fashion designer Erdem Moralioglu’s husband told him to stop buying busts. He didn’t listen — and has continued to populate their London home with figures purchased from flea markets and small auction houses.
Marlon Brando dropped by once a week. Quentin Tarantino mixed margaritas at the bar.
@therealcasavega
opened nearly 70 years ago in Sherman Oaks, and it’s still a beloved industry hangout.
From “My Neighbor Totoro” (1988) to the ecological epic “Princess Mononoke” (1997) to the phantasmagorical fable “Spirited Away” (2001), Hayao Miyazaki renders the wildest reaches of imagination and the maddest swirls of motion almost entirely by hand
Sought after by Spike Lee, Stanley Kubrick, and Solange Knowles alike, the visual artist Arthur Jafa is changing representations of blackness in museums and beyond
T's 2020 Greats issue celebrates five talents who, in mastering their crafts, have changed their fields — and the culture at large:
@DawoudBey
, Angela Davis, Barbara Kruger,
@FKATwigs
and Sigourney Weaver
#TGreatsIssue
Grapes have been associated with pleasure since ancient times, a symbol of Bacchus, the god of wine and revelry. These days, they’re decorating dinner tables, doubling as cornucopian decorations and low-effort snacks.
We've rounded up the 14 most intriguing homes featured in T this year, from a Louisiana tower surrounded by a moat and fronted by a pair of 300-year-old giant live oak trees to a summer camp turned family retreat in Connecticut