@dhohlt Profile picture

jdhohlt

@dhohlt

editorial director, @tmagazine. Ex e-i-c, Slate. Former editor at NY Mag

Joined October 2012
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jdhohlt Reposted

T assembled a group of experts to discuss the images that have best captured — and changed — the world since 1955. Content warning: This story contains graphic images of violence and death. nyti.ms/3VnuLBQ


"We chose judges from the realms of both fine art and reportage because, increasingly, the line between the two has collapsed."

T assembled a group of experts to discuss the images that have best captured — and changed — the world since 1955. Content warning: This story contains graphic images of violence and death. nyti.ms/3VnuLBQ



jdhohlt Reposted

Before there was tourism, there was pilgrimage: a trip of endurance and ecstasy in celebration of one’s faith. For our Travel issue, the writer @AatishTaseer embarked on his own pilgrimage to the heart of three religions in Bolivia, Mongolia and Iraq. nyti.ms/3Qvc4Zp


"Rather than make apologies for stories with good intentions and dubious entertainment value, we now get to see ourselves as worse people in better product."

T assembled a group of experts to discuss the images that have best captured — and changed — the world since 1955. Content warning: This story contains graphic images of violence and death. nyti.ms/3VnuLBQ



"If many of her peers from the late ’60s and ’70s have since softened their radical stances, Rosler remains a die-hard. In her persistence, though, there is also optimism."

Since the 1960s, the artist Martha Rosler has been mounting an unrelenting opposition to America’s various social injustices — and to many of its citizens’ willful ignorance of them. nyti.ms/47EYBWT



“I think it’s a marketing tool: How confessional can you be?” Dua Lipa says. “I also don’t put so much of my life out there for people to dig into the music in this weird, analytical way.”

Since she was very young, @DUALIPA wanted to be a pop star. Now that she’s done that, she’s working through the rest of her list. nyti.ms/3QqCxZB



jdhohlt Reposted

What books have been the most influential in making and furthering queer culture? That was the question we posed to six writers who ultimately narrowed their picks to a list of 25. nyti.ms/3Xhpknr


jdhohlt Reposted

T’s latest Travel issue is devoted to the extremes, with journeys to the driest, darkest and cattiest places on earth. nyti.ms/450I3ak

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jdhohlt Reposted

“We all have to go our own way at some point,” says the photographer Graciela Iturbide. “If we don’t, we never become ourselves.” nyti.ms/3LKoPhu


jdhohlt Reposted

“The greatest thing about poetry is that it can ambush you,” says Rita Dove. “You can be moving through the most ordinary day, and then you read or hear a poem and suddenly everything around you sharpens.” nyti.ms/41zS1gR


jdhohlt Reposted

For this year’s Culture issue, T asked artistic icons to nominate younger women whose work resonates deeply with them. nyti.ms/3UNNLrv


jdhohlt Reposted

Silvia Venturini Fendi is the third-generation matriarch of the Fendi dynasty, and one of the few women at the creative helm of a luxury fashion house. Except for a brief hiatus in her 20s, she has devoted her entire life to the brand. nyti.ms/3KOitNX


"Every time the world seems to slip from its axis, exposing what feels like the deep solitude of being human, the chimera returns, reminding us that our stewardship of the planet ... is in jeopardy." nytimes.com/2023/02/16/t-m…


"No one chose a baguette or a croissant."

We asked chefs and culinary experts to determine the most delicious and memorable plates in Paris. nyti.ms/3jWHg7t



"Really, an Easter egg enthusiast is often just a conspiracy theorist with popcorn."

We’re all looking for Easter eggs — but to what end? nyti.ms/3ZyOuyu



jdhohlt Reposted

Our 2022 Greats issue, out Oct. 16, celebrates four inimitable artists whose talents — and place in the culture — are undeniable. nyti.ms/3fTwSLq


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