EditorialWhile decades apart in experience, Dries Van Noten and Christopher John Rogers are both known for their creative use of color and holding on to their autonomy. (Marta Monteiro/The New York Times)
EditorialWhile the military can exert fairly strict control over men and women in uniform, civilian law enforcement agencies face a different set of challenges in addressing extremists or extremist sympathizers in the ranks. (Justin Metz/The New York Times)
Editorial“Modern medicine has trained me and my fellow doctors to pin patients down, like beetles to be examined on a bulletin board,” writes Gina Siddiqui. “Unsurprisingly, patients do not feel well understood while pinned on the paper roll of an exam table.” (Lucy Jones/The New York Times)
EditorialAn image provided by Chris Chapman of his Bored Ape Yacht Club NFT artwork, which he had listed for sale on OpenSea, the largest NFT marketplace, setting the price at about $1 million. (via Chris Chapman via The New York Times)
EditorialDeventia Townsend, a registered Democrat, and his wife, Charlene, at their home in Anchorage on April 12, 2022. (Ash Adams/The New York Times)
EditorialSabbathday Lake Shaker Village, the sole active Shaker community in existence, in New Gloucester, Maine, March 25, 2022. (Tristan Spinski/The New York Times)
EditorialRumble, the far right?s go-to video sharing platform, has experienced explosive growth since conservatives and supporters of former President Donald Trump embraced it after the 2020 election. (Erik Carter/The New York Times)
EditorialStocks are swinging all over the place. It’s a good time to take your hands off the wheel — here’s how to let go. (Robert Neubecker/The New York Times)
Editorial“For more than three decades as a critic, I’ve shared my passion for classical music. I’ve also expressed frustrations with the field. Of all the performing arts, mine has been the most conservative, the most stuck in a core repertory of works from the distant past,” writes Anthony Tommasini, the departing classical music critic for The New York Times. (Fatinha Ramos/The New York Times)
EditorialA case that began with a feud in the United Arab Emirates, stretched from the U.S. to India and is now playing out in the British courts offers a rare glimpse into the anatomy of a hack-and-leak operation. (John Whitlock/The New York Times)
EditorialThe artist Elaine Williams at a quilt mural near the historic Freedom Quilting Bee building, a women’s sewing cooperative in Rehoboth, Ala., Aug. 30, 2021. (Wulf Bradley/The New York Times)
EditorialKerry James Marshall, who was chosen to design stained-glass windows to replacie the ones removed from the Washington National Cathedral in 2017, in Washington on Wednesday, Sept. 22, 2021. (Michael A. McCoy/The New York Times)
EditorialAs live music revs back up, The New York Times spoke to five professionals around the industry about their experiences with fans, safety protocols, volume levels and tour plans. (Matt Williams/The New York Times)
EditorialAfter the Delta variant disrupted plans to reopen after Labor Day, many businesses pushed their targets further out or left them open-ended. (Huan Tran/The New York Times)
EditorialA graphic, made using cryo-electron microscopy, of a hepatitis B virus capsid where the protein is in red, green, yellow and blue (colors chosen to highlight capsid geometry) and a drug-like compound, HAP-TAMRA, in magenta. (Schlicksup, Wang, et al (2018) via The New York Times)
EditorialSneak peek inside Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolies Fleur de Miraval estate as former couple prepare to launch $390-a-pop rosé Champagne this week
EditorialThe performance artist Ragnar Kjartansson outside his studio, in a converted fishnet storehouse in Reykjavik, Iceland, Sept. 2, 2020. (Kristin Bogadottir/The New York Times)
EditorialClockwise from top left: Raihana Azad, Raihana Azad, both members of Afghanistan’s parliament; Hasiba Ebrahimi, an actress; Gaisu Yari, a government civil service commissioner; Nargis Hurakhsh, a journalist, in Kabul, Afghanistan. (Kiana Hayeri/The New York Times)
EditorialClockwise from top left: Raihana Azad, Raihana Azad, both members of Afghanistan’s parliament; Hasiba Ebrahimi, an actress; Gaisu Yari, a government civil service commissioner; Nargis Hurakhsh, a journalist, in Kabul, Afghanistan. (Kiana Hayeri/The New York Times)
EditorialKellen Nelson, a Wisconsin farmer, says patching, not repaving, is all his road has gotten for half a century, outside of Osseo, Wis., on Oct. 18, 2019. (Tim Gruber/The New York Times)