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Issue No. 4

It Was a Week for …

… platitudes and bromides, beginning as it did with the murder of 31 people in two mass shootings in El Paso and Dayton—or, as Joe Biden initially had it, in Michigan and Houston. Not to be outdone, President Trump asked that “God bless the memory of those who perished in Toledo.” Meanwhile, Heidi and Ted Cruz were “praying for the victims & their families,” as were Mitch McConnell and his wife, Elaine Chao. (Soon enough, people were presumably praying for McConnell, who fell at home and fractured his shoulder. Rand Paul was also hospitalized, for the removal of part of a lung. No, it was not a good week to be a senator from Kentucky.)…

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Issue No. 4

The View from Here

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Class Clown How Boris Johnson uses education and privilege to taunt the toffs and play to the yobs

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Glock Party Celebrities flock to fête the inventor of a killer handgun

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The China Syndrome Rebels armed with apps, grocery-bag ties, and surfboard shields

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Art on Four Wheels At $70 million, the Ferrari 250 GTO sells for almost as much as a Jeff Koons. But: you can drive it

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Briefly

The (Oval) Office

The news that The Office will be leaving Netflix at the end of next year is a devastating blow to the series’s legions of fans. But fear not, an even more cringe-worthy iteration is playing out every night on cable news: The (Oval) Office! All of your favorite characters are back—Michael, Jim, Pam, Dwight, Angela, Meredith, Ryan, Creed, Kevin, and David! But with all-new plotlines—and a new (but familiar) cast of misfits and miscreants. It’s must-see TV taken to a whole new level!

Swamp Creature

Forgotten but not gone, Scott Pruitt, the disgraced former E.P.A. chief, is still shilling for coal
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Small Talk

Miracle on Gansevoort Street Keith McNally has reopened Pastis in Lower Manhattan—a wonder, given his recent run of terrible luck

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Prints for the People

Britain isn’t always remembered for modernist art, but a new exhibition at London’s Dulwich Picture Gallery makes you wonder why. “Cutting Edge: Modernist British Printmaking” celebrates the bold, half-forgotten figures of the Grosvenor School of Modern Art. Founded after the First World War and closed at the onset of the Second, Grosvenor was briefly the country’s fiercest champion of linocut, the linoleum-based printmaking technique that first appeared in 1900s Germany but failed to catch on across the Channel. The same qualities that made linocut unpopular in other English schools—newness, cheapness, simplicity, versatility—allowed it to flourish at Grosvenor. Claude Flight, who taught most of the artists in this show, called it “an art of the people.” READ ON

Cyril Power’s Whence & Whither, circa 1930. “Cutting Edge: Modernist British Printmaking” is on view through September 8.

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Discover

Dave Brown The Hollywood maverick who hosts a film festival—every single week

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Style
Pack The Métier Toiletries Bag August has arrived, and if the gods are smiling, you’re out of the office until… Strap on A Re-Imagined Rolex Before bragging about your Rolex collection, stop right there… Slip On Mary Katrantzou Dress Sundress season is on the wane, but the sunset dress is another story entirely. Mary Katrantzou’s digital prints… Step Into Pantherella Socks Right now, in these broiling, cauldron-hot days of August, just about the last thing on any man’s mind… Carry Wm. J. Mills & Co. Bag The Mills family have been crafting sails out of their workshop on Long Island’s North Fork since 1880. Strut Chanel Are you high?” is never the desired reaction when your significant other discovers the price of your new shoes. But all will be forgiven… Apply Christophe Robin Whenever your AIR MAIL style correspondent collapses into the chair of her coiffeur, lamenting the destructive effects of seawater Pack The Métier Toiletries Bag August has arrived, and if the gods are smiling, you’re out of the office until… Strap on A Re-Imagined Rolex Before bragging about your Rolex collection, stop right there… Slip On Mary Katrantzou Dress Sundress season is on the wane, but the sunset dress is another story entirely. Mary Katrantzou’s digital prints… Step Into Pantherella Socks Right now, in these broiling, cauldron-hot days of August, just about the last thing on any man’s mind… Carry Wm. J. Mills & Co. Bag The Mills family have been crafting sails out of their workshop on Long Island’s North Fork since 1880. Strut Chanel Are you high?” is never the desired reaction when your significant other discovers the price of your new shoes. But all will be forgiven… Apply Christophe Robin Whenever your AIR MAIL style correspondent collapses into the chair of her coiffeur, lamenting the destructive effects of seawater

Not Your Ordinary Radioactive Meatball Also: true and true-enough crime series to latch on to, set in L.A. and N.Y.

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Small Talk
“We can’t cure it, but with enough social pressure, we can get it canceled.”

Still Processing

The artist Dóra Maurer, now 82, is celebrated in Hungary, but outside her native country most don’t know her name. Maurer cut her teeth during the Cold War 60s and 70s, and was a pioneer among Eastern Europe’s fledgling avant-garde. For much of that time she led a double life, as the system forced one to, producing figurative paintings in line with Soviet doctrine while going off the grid with experimental, conceptual, and minimalist films, photographs, prints, drawings, and reliefs—work that is, in a word, cerebral. READ ON

Relative Quasi Image, 1996. “Dóra Maurer” is on view at the Tate Modern through July 5, 2020.

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Discover
Gallery

Skrebneski’s Lens

Small Talk
“Your job is safe—at least until you’re too old to be hired for another job but not so old that you can retire.”

Gurinder Chadha On the memoirs that altered her worldview

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Beauvoir Revisited A new book offers a second take on The Second Sex

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Reviews

Prince Albert: The Man Who Saved the Monarchy

by A. N. Wilson
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Inland

by Téa Obreht
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Three New Mysteries

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The Fatal Passion of Alma Rattenbury

by Sean O’Connor
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“I Was the First Person Allowed into Susan Sontag’s Secret Archives”

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Small Talk
“Sleep? No, I’m the anxiety fairy. How about a cuppa joe?”

You’re Not Supposed to Wear It! But no matter—designer Tomo Koizumi still gets all the likes

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Ask Richard

Dear Richard,

I’m on my way to Düsseldorf for some very dull business, but I’d much rather be in Berlin for some very un-dull culture. If I route through Berlin, I’ll be able to spend a day there.

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Petra or Bust A four-day, 33-mile hike through the Jordan Trail

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Best
View With a Room

Give Peace a Chance Ideally at Trasierra, a romantic hideaway in the Andalusian hills


Wish You Were Here Colby Mugrabi packs for Madrid

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Deep-Summer Playlist

Here in the homestretch of summer, it’s smooth sailing. Overheating strategies devised, grilling skills on point. Time to get groovy AF. This Life! Special shout-out to the Meters, R.I.P. Art Neville


Here we see Sonia Tolstoy on the night she discovered that her husband, 82-year-old Leo, had changed his will and, in an effort to be like Jesus, disowned all his copyrights. Realizing that this will leave her and her 13 children penniless, Sonia expresses her displeasure.
Is Edited By

Graydon Carter and Alessandra Stanley

Deputy Editors

Chris Garrett Michael Hainey George Kalogerakis Nathan King

Design Director

Angela Panichi

Chief Technology Officer

John Tornow

Books Editor

Jim Kelly

Arts Intel Report Editor

Laura Jacobs

Style Editor

Ashley Baker

Articles Editor

Ash Carter

Senior Editor

Julia Vitale

Photo Editor

Ann Schneider

Cartoon Editor

Bob Mankoff

Communications Director

Beth Kseniak



Assistant Editors

Elena Clavarino Clementine Ford Alex Oliveira


International Editor

Isabelle Harvie-Watt

London Editor

Bridget Arsenault


Copy Editor

Adam Nadler

Production Editor

H. Scott Jolley

Associate Editor

Elinor Schneider


Chief Operating Officer

Bill Keenan

Chief Marketing Officer

Emily Davis

Brand Partnerships

Anjali Lewis

Financial & Business Operations

Marc Leyer

Integrated Marketing Manager

Madeline Spates

Intern

Eshaan Jain

Issue No. 4
August 10, 2019
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Issue No. 4
August 10, 2019

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