Inside the Hottest Tony Award Afterparties of 2026
Broadway’s biggest winners—and their famous friends—celebrated long after the final bow.
At Napa’s Barrel Auction, Wine Country’s Own Get the First Pour for a Cause
The annual barrel auction offers a rare taste of Napa before the bottle, with winemakers pouring unfinished lots and proceeds going back into the community.
In Philadelphia, a New Art Fair Removes Scale From the Equation
Elsewhere’s inaugural iteration was the embodiment of Philadelphia’s vivacious spirit and scrappy determination.
Business
See AllAnthropic Philosopher Amanda Askell Says Claude May Replace Her Job One Day
Amanda Askell, Anthropic’s resident philosopher who’s working to shape Claude’s “personality,” says advanced A.I. could eventually take over even deeply human jobs like her own.
The New Front Line of A.I. Governance Is Procurement
Trilateral Research’s Amelia Williams examines a growing blind spot in enterprise A.I. adoption: procurement. As organizations rush to deploy powerful A.I. systems, procurement teams often make governance, compliance and data protection decisions without adequately managing risk.
Alexandr Wang Defends Meta’s Muse Spark as an ‘Appetizer’ in Bigger A.I. Push
Alexandr Wang defended Meta’s Muse Spark and said the company’s next models will be more competitive.
Anthropic’s Daniela Amodei Charts Leaner A.I. Strategy as IPO Race With OpenAI Heats
Anthropic’s co-founder president says the company is avoiding OpenAI-style spending while betting on safety and enterprise A.I.
The End of the Sustainability Premium
IMD Business School’s Goutam Challagalla and Frédéric Dalsace challenge a persistent business assumption: that consumers will pay a premium for sustainability. They argue that successful companies are not selling sustainability as a virtue. Instead, they’re using it as a catalyst for innovation
Art
See AllDirector Cristian Mungiu Says ‘Fjord’ Is About the Limits of Freedom, Not Clashing Cultures
In a rare feat, the Romanian filmmaker has now won Cannes’ top prize twice.
Sprüth Magers Celebrates a Decade in Los Angeles With the Artists Who Helped Define a City
“10 Years in L.A.!” makes the case that Monika Sprüth and Philomene Magers built something historic on Wilshire Boulevard.
Christie’s Rachel Koffsky On How the Handbag Became the Art Market’s Most Elegant Entry Point
Driven by Hermès devotees, archival Chanel aficionados and a renewed appetite for early-2000s fashion, the handbag market has become one of the auction world’s most reliable pipelines for new collectors.
Joan Miró’s Joy Is as Infectious as Ever
Miró’s paintings explode with joy and exuberance, and those emotions are palpable. They simply make you happy.
A $3 Million Night at the Geffen: MOCA’s Celebrated Gala Returns in Full Force
Spotted in the assembled crowd were actors Supriya Ganesh and Keanu Reeves (on the arm of Los Angeles and Berlin‐based artist Alexandra Grant), who shared the room with filmmaker Ava DuVernay, bestselling author Minka Kelly, singer-songwriter Rufus Wainwright and Dan Reynolds of Imagine Dragons.
Lifestyle
See AllThe Approachable Tasting Menu Takes Fine Dining Off Its Pedestal
As diners grow more selective about time, money and energy, chefs are rethinking the tasting menu as something more personal than performative.
The Best Fashion From the 2026 Tony Awards Red Carpet
Before the trophies are handed out at Radio City Music Hall, Broadway’s biggest names give theater’s most exciting night its first act on the red carpet.
Retail Therapy: How to Navigate L.A.’s Best Shopping Neighborhoods
Whether you’re looking to hit the beach after splurging on skincare and jeans on Abbot Kinney or want to spend an entire afternoon at The Grove, we’ve got you covered on L.A.’s best neighborhoods for a day of shopping.
The Nolita Guide: A Local’s Map to the Best Restaurants, Bars and Shops
The downtown neighborhood that fashion built, the Italians never left and the rest of us keep trying to crack—here’s where to eat, drink and shop in Nolita.
Tinashe and Rebecca Black Electrified MoMA’s 2026 Party in the Garden
New York City’s Museum of Modern Art brought together entrepreneurs, artists, collectors and philanthropists for a dinner honoring Betye Saar and Martin Puryear that gave way to a late-night dance party.
Interviews
See AllAt Giovanna Caruso Fendi’s FOROF, Rome’s Past Finds New Context in the Contemporary
In the remains of the Basilica Ulpia near Trajan’s Column, the city’s imperial past meets its cultural present.
The Aldrich’s First Decennial Takes Stock of Contemporary Art in Connecticut
With its inaugural 10-year survey, the Ridgefield institution is making the case that the most interesting art in America can sometimes be found off the beaten path.
When Great Collections Come to Market, Dane Jensen Makes Sure Nothing Is Left on the Table
The founder and director of La Finca Collection Strategies believes that the next great art-market opportunity lies in knowing how, when and where to sell.
Su Xiaobai’s Meditative Material Practice Is the Focus of One of the Biennale’s Most Commanding Shows
The artist’s magmatic lacquer works slow the viewer down by inviting them to investigate, appreciate and understand the temporal process each work embodies.
The Temporal and Geographical Ambiguity of Mark Manders
Frozen in the moment of becoming, the artist’s new bronzes and newspaper works ask what it means to hold an entire civilization in a single object.
Power Lists
See AllObserver New Media Power List: Call for Submissions
Nominations are open for Observer’s 2026 New Media Power List
The 50 Most Powerful PR Firms of 2026
This year’s honorees are emblematic of a notable shift in public relations from responsive publicity to proactive leadership in the moments that matter most.
Wall-to-Wall Cultural Capital: Inside Observer’s Art Power Index Party
Under the dim lights of the Lower East Side’s Maison Nur, art world luminaries gathered to celebrate Observer’s Art Power Index—and each other. From the impassioned speeches to the sharp tailoring and Damien Hirst over the bar, the evening embodied our legacy of chronicling power with style.
2025 Nightlife & Dining Power Index
Humanity is still the most vital ingredient in hospitality, and that isn’t changing anytime soon.
Observer’s 2025 Art Power Index: The Art Market’s Most Influential People
Their acquisitions, affinities and approbations move the needle on valuation and redefine how art is made, shown and sold.
Latest
All LatestOne Fine Show: “Tracey Emin, A Second Life” at Tate Modern in London
“A Second Life,” mostly refers to what art has given her, and it’s possible that going through the exhibition, one could come to know her just as well as if one had met her in person.
The Light-Bodied Reds That Actually Make Sense for Summer
For anyone unmoved by another glass of rosé, these lighter reds offer the season a little more depth without the weight of a cabernet.
Where to Work Out in the Hamptons this Summer
Whether you’re into cycling, Pilates, HIIT or yoga, these are the fitness classes to book in between rosé and lobster rolls if you’re out east this summer.
A.I. Leaders’ Advice for 2026 College Graduates Shows the Limit of Silicon Valley Optimism
At commencements from Carnegie Mellon to the University of Arizona, Jensen Huang, Eric Schmidt and other tech leaders delivered similar advice about A.I. and got very different receptions. The speeches reflected a familiar Silicon Valley optimism, but many graduates heard something more complicated.
The Most Exciting New European Hotels for Escaping the Usual Summer Suspects
These 14 new hotels trade the obvious European summer checklist for private islands, restored palazzos, cliffside suites and places your feed has not yet ruined.
Can Rock Royalty Really Make Art Worth Owning?
Less partisan collectors shouldn’t automatically shy away from paintings and sculpture crafted by big-name musicians, though caution is advised.
Cleophus Hethington’s Afro-Caribbean Food Resets the Scene at L.A.’s Lucia
As Lucia marks its first year, chef Cleophus Hethington is building an Afro-Caribbean menu shaped by Caribbean travel, Black foodways and his Miami roots.
At Marianne Boesky, Sanford Biggers Rewrites the Rules of Material Storytelling
The artist has transformed the gallery into an immersive, stage-like realm where quilts, classical art’s fragments, African masks, sequins and diasporic symbols collide to form striking new narratives.
Otter.ai Founder and CEO Sam Liang on Why A.I. Will Make Typing Obsolete Soon
Otter is challenging tech giants with cross-platform A.I. tools built on meeting data, aiming to outpace Microsoft and Google. CEO Sam Liang outlines how conversational A.I. and context-rich data could redefine how people work and communicate.
How Outposts Turned the World’s Greatest Museums into Instruments of Soft Power
When cities pay hundreds of millions for a Louvre or Guggenheim, the masterpieces don’t always follow.
The Books That Taught Author Courtney Maum How to Be Funny Without Being Cruel
These novels showed her that social satire starring the wealthy and privileged didn’t always have to be savage.
Edmondo and Michele di Robilant Chart a Course for Robilant with Old Masters and New Names
The gallery will balance its Old Master and modern legacy with a contemporary program shaped by Michele.