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Tag: galleries

  • Shara Hughes’s Luminous Landscapes Open Portals into Life, Death and the Sublime

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    Shara Hughes’s “Weather Report” is at David Kordansky Gallery in New York through October 18. Photo: On White Wall Studio, courtesy of David Kordansky Gallery

    Shara Hughes is one of those names that surged during the pandemic, when demand for her paintings spiked and prices climbed quickly, culminating in her record sale of $2,940,000 at Christie’s in May 2022. Yet interest in her work has not waned. Her lush, vibrant visions of nature continue to strike a universal chord, speaking to the human condition and our connection to the world in ways that move beyond market trends.

    Her new body of work, unveiled in “Weather Report” at David Kordansky Gallery during Armory and New York art week, demonstrates Hughes’s painterly command and the existential weight her practice has taken on. Each of the nine large-scale canvases on view unfolds as a dense world of thought and feeling, of self-reflection and experimentation, the outpouring of an artist confronting a pivotal moment in both her life and her creative path.

    “Over the past year or so, I’ve just become more connected to myself, and that kind of growth happens naturally as we get older,” Hughes says when we catch up after the fairs, reflecting on the many shifts in her life recently—her parents aging, her marriage, her friends having children—and how these changes inevitably shape how she sees and makes work. “I’m getting into middle age, and it feels like those kinds of things are becoming more real,” she adds. Questions about the afterlife, about the fleeting and fragile nature of emotions and existence, surface in waves, not constantly but with force when they arrive. “Last summer, I did lose someone in my family, and even though we weren’t especially close, her death jolted me into thinking, what if that were me? It pushed me into those spiritual questions: what is the afterlife, is it really so scary?”

    Shara Hughes stands in her studio wearing denim overalls, surrounded by her brightly colored paintings.Shara Hughes stands in her studio wearing denim overalls, surrounded by her brightly colored paintings.
    Shara Hughes. Portrait: Mary Inhea Kang, courtesy of David Kordansky Gallery

    While Hughes did not set out to make this show a meditation on existential themes, they inevitably shape the works. Her approach to the canvas remains instinctive, driven by an intuitive response to what colors and gestures suggest. Brushstrokes build layer by layer, forming compositions of vibrant tones and painterly currents that resist conventional representation, instead settling into an unorthodox balance.

    “The way I work is really abstract. At the beginning, I might just throw down a few colors and then respond to them, letting the painting guide me more than me directing it,” Hughes admits. “In that sense, it’s very intuitive and reactionary to both the canvas and myself,” she adds. “I’m not trying to illustrate anything specific; the painting shows me how I feel.”

    A viewer looks at two vibrant Shara Hughes paintings side by side, one filled with tropical foliage and the other with surreal trees against a blue sky.A viewer looks at two vibrant Shara Hughes paintings side by side, one filled with tropical foliage and the other with surreal trees against a blue sky.
    Hughes uses dizzying brushwork, vibrant colors and shifting perspectives to make paintings that defy many of the existing conventions associated with the landscape genre. Photo: On White Wall Studio, courtesy of David Kordansky Gallery

    For this reason, Hughes often describes her works as psychological and emotional landscapes: the progressive layering of paint and shifting colors mirrors the complexity of how we process and elaborate the surrounding reality through our senses. Her image-making follows and echoes the meaning-making process we all undergo in “being-in-the-world,” something that precedes any linguistic or symbolic codification. “Often I start without a clear goal, and the painting ends up teaching me—showing me I’m thinking about something or still upset about something agitating inside.”

    Although these works may appear semi-abstract, they represent something very real for Hughes—the reality of the psyche, and the intricate interplay of senses, emotions, and psychological, even pre-cognitive, experience. “Every single thing I paint feels deeply connected to my own experience,” she clarifies. “I hate when people use the word ‘fantasy’ to describe my work because these aren’t fantastical places; they’re real to me, part of my lived experience. They’re very much grounded in reality.”

    Hughes often describes her works as autobiographical, though they are less about recounting events than translating moods and emotional atmospheres. “‘This is how I feel about this event.’ It’s more about filtering my feelings through the idea of landscape,” she explains.

    An expansive gallery installation displays multiple Shara Hughes canvases, including a large tree-like composition at the center.An expansive gallery installation displays multiple Shara Hughes canvases, including a large tree-like composition at the center.
    Hughes’s process rarely involves reference images; instead, she transposes the psychological complexity of her interior world into lush and layered compositions. Photo: On White Wall Studio, courtesy of David Kordansky Gallery

    Her recurring choice of landscapes and nature as sites to project and reflect her feelings is tied to her upbringing in Atlanta, Georgia. “I wasn’t in wild nature every day—it was the city—but I lived on a lake, so I spent a lot of time outdoors,” she recounts. “My family also had a tree farm about two hours south, and I’d go there often with my brothers and friends. I did a lot of camping and backpacking, so I always felt a connection to nature.” Interestingly, Hughes only began painting landscapes after moving to New York, perhaps as a way of longing for the lush environments that had long shaped her life and imagination.

    What immediately strikes viewers in this new body of work is its heightened luminosity, which expands the canvas into surrounding space with an auratic, almost epiphanic presence that extends beyond the physical surface. If Hughes’s paintings have always had the ability to channel the very energy of the landscape, this series feels animated by a deeper animistic spirituality, suggesting an intensified awareness of the need to emotionally reattune with our environment and reconceive ourselves as part of broader ecologies of interdependence and symbiotic relations.

    Hughes recalls visiting Niagara Falls last summer and being overwhelmed by the sheer force of nature and the vitality of its primordial energy. That same sensation flows through these canvases, where she seeks to capture the generative power that art-making can unlock. Works such as The Good Light (2025), The Rift (2025) and Niagara (2025) transpose onto canvas the relentless vitality of flowing water and the radiant energy of sunlight colliding with cascading drops that dissolve into air before beginning their cycle anew.

    Two large Shara Hughes canvases depict radiant landscapes, one in fiery reds and oranges and the other evoking cascading waterfalls.Two large Shara Hughes canvases depict radiant landscapes, one in fiery reds and oranges and the other evoking cascading waterfalls.
    Each of the nine large-scale works on view encompasses a world of thought, feeling, self-reflection and open-ended experimentation. Photo: On White Wall Studio, courtesy of David Kordansky Gallery

    For Hughes, these paintings are less about the afterlife than about a larger current of energy that surpasses us. “It’s the cycle of life, for sure, but also the force behind it—something hopeful and exciting we can lean on,” she reflects. In Mama (2025), for example, she sought to express nature as a quilt or a hug—something stable and generative, a maternal presence, the timeless archetype of Mother Nature. “It could be a mound of flowers larger than life, or a rock that transforms into a figure you might go to for stability or even worship, like a Madonna figure,” she explains. “All of these elements are part of nature, but also part of the psychological landscapes I’m always exploring.”

    Hughes’s paintings humanize and personify nature, giving it the presence of characters. In Bigger Person (2024), the interwoven visual field between foreground and background becomes the stage for a tension between figuration and abstraction, between human and nature, which ultimately coexist in a generative exchange of forces. “Often I use trees, plants and flowers to suggest a human presence, a self-portrait or even a portrait of someone. In that way, the landscape imagery allows me to connect with everyone,” Hughes reflects. Nature becomes, for her, a platform to contemplate human existence beyond categorization and individuation, reaching instead for universality. “A tree doesn’t need to be labeled as female or male or given a certain skin color or age. It becomes universal.”

    Other paintings, like Pearl Gate (2025), appear to inhabit a liminal space beyond both the sensory and human world, evoking an archetypal and magical dimension of landscape, one historically acknowledged and embraced through symbols and rituals, often in opposition to anthropocentric, rational or scientific narratives.

    A vivid Shara Hughes painting in red, orange, and purple hues fills a central wall in a pristine gallery space.A vivid Shara Hughes painting in red, orange, and purple hues fills a central wall in a pristine gallery space.
    MaMa (2025), an eight-foot-tall forest scene is dominated by a luminous field of red, orange and yellow that cascades down from the sun-like head of a flower anchoring the composition’s top edge. Photo: On White Wall Studio, courtesy of David Kordansky Gallery

    In this sense, Hughes’s approach to landscape echoes that of Romanticism, which treated nature not simply as a subject to be depicted but as a privileged arena for probing the essence of the human condition in relation to immensity. For the Romantics, landscape was never mere scenery but rather a stage on which to confront mortality, transcendence and the fragile limits of human power against overwhelming natural forces. Hughes recognizes this legacy, acknowledging that her paintings respond to the same Romantic notion of the “sublime”: a vision of nature that provokes wonder and terror, awe and unease in equal measure.

    Ultimately, while Hughes insists on grounding her works in sensorial and emotional human perception, these syntheses of color, light and natural elements—offered to the human eye yet absent of the human subject—gesture toward more-than-human realms and beyond human time. They suggest alternative ways of feeling, perceiving and embracing the vital entanglements of life forms and cosmic phenomena on which our existence depends.

    Hughes’s works exist in and are nourished by this liminal space, poised between the sensorial and the psychological, the earthly and the unearthly—a threshold only color and paint can traverse. “I think I’m always contradicting myself in the work, and that’s important,” Hughes says. “What does continue to grow, though, is my connection to the work and my confidence in it, and maybe that comes through in the expansion of approaches and how many different types of painting are in the show.”

    Yet these luminous landscapes also function as portals between worlds, suggesting that the longing for transcendence can be satisfied by contemplating nature. In doing so, they invite us to accept both the limits and possibilities of our human position within it while rediscovering nature’s spiritual and energetic force once we reattune ourselves to its primordial powers of creation over destruction.

    An expansive gallery installation displays multiple Shara Hughes canvases, including a large tree-like composition at the center.An expansive gallery installation displays multiple Shara Hughes canvases, including a large tree-like composition at the center.
    In open-ended experiments in image-making, Hughes depicts kaleidoscopic visions of flora and fauna in processes of constant evolution. Photo: On White Wall Studio, courtesy of David Kordansky Gallery

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    Shara Hughes’s Luminous Landscapes Open Portals into Life, Death and the Sublime

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    Elisa Carollo

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  • Could Almaty’s Contemporary Art Museum Mark a New Era for Kazakhstan?

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    The opening of the Almaty Museum of Arts signals a turning point for Kazakhstan’s cultural ambitions. Photo: Alexey Poptsov

    Like dervishes, dancers turned in circles in their white and rainbow kimonos in the hall of the Almaty Museum of Arts during a performance by Greek artist Nefeli Papadimouli. They were creating space amongst the crowd that receded more and more towards the walls of the building. Two British businesspeople behind me continued to network while the sleeves of the dervishes missed them by just a few centimeters. It was the night of the museum’s opening, and, as surreal as it was, these two people’s intense chatting about investments and deals, as if nothing was happening around them, is not surprising for Kazakhstan. We are in a country known for cars, natural resources and wealth generated through oil exports, and many people here—expats and locals alike—have habits that are hard to break.

    Asking someone to put aside industry to appreciate art is a tough sell, though that’s likely to change with the recent openings, just a few days apart, of the Almaty Museum and the Tselinny Center of Contemporary Culture. Together they mark the beginning of a new phase for Kazakhstan, and its epicenter is the country’s historical cultural capital versus the more business-oriented Astana.

    A city of contradictions, Almaty is very green and has many parks but is also plagued by traffic, resulting in it being one of the 25 most polluted cities in the world. The city center has a number of Soviet buildings and decorations that speak to its past—especially to space exploration—but those have been carelessly swallowed by KFC, Starbucks and Burger King. Here, the communist past and consumerist present conflate, and these juxtapositions are reminders that the recent history of Kazakhstan is anything but easy. The large former USSR state was originally composed of nomadic populations coming from Central Asia, and today there is a Muslim-majority population that speaks both Russian and Kazakh, a language once seen as inferior by the Russians, who tried for years to suppress it.

    Many of its contemporary artists explore what it means to decolonize from Russia, rebelling against a form of orientalism that differs from that practiced by Western colonial powers. Among them is Almagul Menlibayeva, one of the most widely known contemporary Kazakh artists, whose work reconfigures nomadic narratives, remixing symbols and centering women. She was chosen as the subject of the first solo exhibition at the Almaty Museum of Arts—a comprehensive and stunning show curated by Gridthiya Gaweewong.

    An artwork by Almagul Menlibayeva shows two women in traditional dress standing in a rose garden in front of a large historic building with a turquoise dome.An artwork by Almagul Menlibayeva shows two women in traditional dress standing in a rose garden in front of a large historic building with a turquoise dome.
    Almagul Menlibayeva, Bodyguards of Yassawi II, 2010. Collection of Almaty Museum of Arts

    Women are at the center of the Kazakh art scene. “The presence of women artists is not by design; it is simply the reality of our scene,” Almaty Museum director Meruyert Kalieva told Observer. On the day of the opening, she was pregnant and radiant in a white dress, representing not only an authoritative voice for contemporary art in Kazakhstan, but also cutting a goddess-like figure. “Women are the leading voices in Kazakhstan, and it naturally reflects in the museum.”

    The evolving Central Asian art scene

    It has been a few years since Central Asia began quietly making a place for itself on the international art scene. A significant moment in recent years was the Central Asian focus at the Parisian art fair Asia Now, where a European public could encounter the presentations of Aspan Gallery, founded by Kalieva, and Pygmalion Gallery, founded by Danagul Tolepbay, who was behind the Kazakh Pavilion at the 2024 Venice Biennale. Central Asian and Caucasus contemporary art was highlighted last year at Abu Dhabi Art, in a special section curated by Elvira Eevr Djaltchinova-Malec, director and founder of the WIMCAA Foundation.

    A large black, white, and red mural by Fernand Léger depicts stylized human figures, birds, and foliage.A large black, white, and red mural by Fernand Léger depicts stylized human figures, birds, and foliage.
    Fernand Léger, Les Femmes au perroquet, 1954-1960. Collection of Almaty Museum of Arts

    Both from a market standpoint and a critical standpoint, there is a tendency to consider the region too broadly. Curator Sara Raza, director of the soon-to-open Centre for Contemporary Art in Tashkent, Uzbekistan, developed with her curatorial studio, Punk Orientalism, a number of shows focusing on the region, including projects in Doha. In this context, Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan—the two most prominent “stans” in terms of emerging art scenes—have shown a degree of rivalry. Both have hosted major events in the past few weeks, but there has been little collaboration between them. While Kazakhstan received in Almaty many art professionals coming from the Bukhara Biennale and the Tashkent Art Centre preview, Uzbekistan did little to facilitate wider engagement, with only a few Uzbek representatives present at the Almaty Museum of Arts opening.

    The comparison between the two countries is inevitable, although not entirely fair: Uzbekistan’s government has heavily invested in cultural infrastructure in recent years, using art as part of a broader tourism and heritage strategy, while Kazakhstan continues to rely largely on private initiatives to grow its art scene.

    Kazakhstan’s rising art system

    In this nascent contemporary art ecosystem, it’s only natural for pivotal art figures like Kalieva to wear many different hats and contribute to the art scene in different ways. At the moment, there seem not to be enough curators in the country, though at the same time, Kazakhstan is less heavy-handed in sourcing art expertise from the West, compared to many other Middle Eastern or Asian countries.

    Consider the Almaty Museum’s inaugural curators: Latvian Inga Lace—C-MAP Central and Eastern Europe Fellow at MoMA in New York, curator at the Latvian Centre for Contemporary Art and an otherwise eminent figure in the Eastern European art scene—and Gridthiya Gaweewong, arguably a household name in Southeast Asian contemporary art, having directed the Jim Thompson Art Center in Bangkok and the Thailand Biennale 2023 in Chiang Rai.

    A contemporary installation by Yerbossyn Meldibekov features three horse legs mounted on a white plinth in a gallery setting with paintings on the walls.A contemporary installation by Yerbossyn Meldibekov features three horse legs mounted on a white plinth in a gallery setting with paintings on the walls.
    Yerbossyn Meldibekov, Monument to an Unknown Hero, 1998, Collection of Almaty Museum of Arts

    “When putting together the first presentation for the Almaty Museum of Arts, I trusted our specialists, like Gridthiya and Inga, in order to bring new visions and new feelings to contemporary art,” Kalieva said. “My role is to balance these different mentalities and find compromises, while giving artists complete freedom in temporary exhibitions.”

    Seventy percent of the works in the museum come from the personal collection of the Almaty Museum of Arts founder Nurlan Smagulov. For him, the museum is both a personal and a national endeavor. “During the Soviet Union, everything was prohibited,” he told Observer. “Going abroad was impossible. Nobody collected art, and artists could only work in socialist realism. Today we have freedom, and I still cannot get enough of it. Building this museum is my way of making sure this freedom translates into art.”

    Smagulov’s passion for art emerged long before the museum was conceived: “When I was 17, studying in Moscow, I used to go to the Pushkin Museum during lunch breaks. Seeing the Impressionists was like a bombshell to me,” he recalled. “At that time, I never thought I would leave the country, let alone collect art. Today I have some of these works in my collection, and it still feels unreal that I could bring them back to Kazakhstan.”

    The Almaty Museum’s building was designed to convey this idea of openness, with spacious and squared-off architecture featuring pale limestone and rust-colored window frames reminiscent of Richard Serra sculptures. The result is a warm, expansive, luminous and orderly space that feels open but also structured.

    An abstract painting by Almagul Menlibayeva depicts colorful human and animal-like forms in bold geometric shapes.An abstract painting by Almagul Menlibayeva depicts colorful human and animal-like forms in bold geometric shapes.
    Almagul Menlibayeva, Bodyguards of Yassawi II, 1997. Photo: Deonisy Mit

    It’s a shame that during the week of the opening, international audiences coming to Almaty didn’t have any points of comparison or historical progression, as the main public art museum in Almaty, Kasteyev State Museum of Arts, was closed for renovation. Taken pessimistically, this shows how little vested interest the government has in the organic development of its art scene. We are left to wonder just how much private taste shapes a country’s art history. “Choosing works is a lot of responsibility. We visited many museums, studied carefully, and selected works with a strong connection to our region,” Smagulov asserted. “This is not about ticking boxes with blue-chip names. Every work here is chosen for its relation to Kazakhstan.”

    Regional shifts in politics and culture

    The Almaty Museum of Arts opens at a very particular time for the region. With the war in Ukraine and the decline of the art scene in Russia, it’s worth considering whether Kazakhstan, and the other Central Asian “stans,” might become a new center for contemporary art from the entire region, something that is no longer possible in Moscow or Saint Petersburg.

    The permanent collection of the Almaty Museum doesn’t veer much towards Russia; it is, as Smagulov said, very much focused on Kazakh and Central Asian art. “Kazakhstan has always been more Eurasian than Russia. Around 30 percent of our territory is in Europe, and with our large Russian population, our country is often seen as more Westernized than Uzbekistan. But at the same time, our nomadic roots and openness set us apart. We don’t close ourselves behind fences; we live in the open steppe.” Smagulov emphasized that the museum sees itself as part of a decolonial process. “This is about a longer search for Kazakh identity apart from Soviet ideology. You can already see it in the art of the 1960s. Now it has become even more urgent.”

    He added that he conceived the museum as part of a larger ecosystem: “We hope the Almaty Museum will have a Bilbao effect for the city, attracting both international guests and visitors from across Kazakhstan. But more than that, we want to create ambitious projects and make sure Kazakh artists are represented abroad, so people know how rich our country is in poetry and art.”

    Could Almaty’s Contemporary Art Museum Mark a New Era for Kazakhstan?

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    Naima Morelli

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  • The 10 Darkest Netflix TV Shows

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    When you sit down on your couch or curl up in your bed to spend a couple hours scrolling on Netflix, chances are you’re looking for something light, something funny, something romantic, or something that you can put on in the background while you (let’s be real) scroll on your phone. We’ve all been there. But sometimes you want something a little different, something more challenging. Something that will, perhaps, remind you that things could be a lot worse.

    We’re talking, of course, about the really dark entertainment to be found on the platform. Plenty of streamers have their share of depressing or outright scary TV, but Netflix has a carefully curated crop of disturbing stuff. Whether it’s the type of true crime show that will make you double check if you locked your doors, or a sci-fi series that will make you glad you can’t time travel, or a certain anthology show that will make you second-guess what you choose to post on your phone (yeah, you know the one), one streaming service has it all. Chances are, you’re already a subscriber.

    So, if you’ve got a certain hankering for something darker than your usual sitcom or romantic period drama, check out our selection of the darkest shows to be found anywhere — but specifically on Netflix. From real-life murder to spooky science fiction and everything in between, these are the kinds of shows that will make you look at your life and say to yourself, yeah, I have it pretty good actually. Don’t say we didn’t warn you.

    The 10 Darkest Shows on Netflix

    These shows will have you making sure you locked your doors at night. 

    READ MORE: 10 Great Netflix Shows You Probably Never Watched

    10 Cozy TV Shows Perfect for Fall

    From cozy, school-year coming-of-age series to spooky mysteries set in small towns, these TV shows deliver perfect autumnal vibes for fall viewing.

    Gallery Credit: Erica Russell

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    Emma Stefansky

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  • Daily Evening Randomness by Hendy

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    “The true soldier fights not because he hates what is in front of him, but because he loves what is behind him.”

    As you probably would assume by how the majority of my ‘Evening Randomness’ posts, I’m a big history nerd. That’s why a lot of my stuff tends to dip into the past…

    When I thought of this idea a few weeks ago, I wanted to do a post on cool historical military photos. However, I couldn’t bring myself to not show some respect to the people who fight & have faught for their country regardless of the timeline.

    So, this one’s got a mix of both historical and modern day shots.

    Welcome to ‘Daily Evening Randomness,’ where we wind down for the evening under a random theme. Tonight? Military.

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    Hendy

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  • If You Can Explain It, You’re Better Than Most

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    The internet has no shortage of weird. Every scroll, there’s another photo that makes you stop and ask, “What exactly am I looking at?”

    Some of these moments might actually have an explanation if you squint hard enough or put on your inner detective hat. Others? Not a chance. They are just odd little slices of life that defy logic and leave you scratching your head.

    No one can explain the masculine urge to steal the Burger King sign to display in your front yard. When obviously there’s no BK there -.-

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    Ryder

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  • Phone Memes That Are Relatable To Pretty Much Everyone On Earth

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    Ah, cell phones.

    They run our lives now: maps, music, group chats, camera, alarm clocks, whatever — you can’t escape.

    Sometimes it’s better, sometimes it’s… worse.

    Either way, the struggles are universal. So here’s a fresh scroll of painfully relatable phone memes for literally all of us.

    But first, a fun Norm MacDonald bit I love:

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    Ty

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  • The Best Horror Movie From Every Year of the Past 100+ Years

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    It wasn’t long after the history of cinema began at the dawn of the 20th century that horror movies started to appear on the screen. Like many early films, these short, silent pioneering works were often theatrical — a byproduct of their stage origins — and based on established literary pieces.

    But it wasn’t long before the genre took on a life of its own, as you’ll see in the list below of the Best Horror Movie From Every Year. So, even though horror movies existed before 1920, it wasn’t until that year that they became a viable genre film and expert directors found ways — through lighting, camera angles and even storytelling — to make them infinitely more interesting than their stagey predecessors.

    Movies like The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari and Nosferatu paved the way for Frankenstein, Dracula and Universal’s famous monsters in the ’30s. Initially, the genre developed in stages — first by incorporating social commentary into its narrative, and later by addressing topics such as sexuality and psychology, as horror films matured alongside their audience.

    Along the way, demonic possession, alien beings and serial killers found horror in disparate places, whether in the church, outer space or your neighborhood. Themes came and went, but mainstays remain: Vampires and ghosts have been popular subjects ever since the ’20s.

    No matter what form they take, these films have one thing in common: They want you to jump in your seat, scream, spill your popcorn and soil your pants. Haunting images from The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920) remain as frightening as those seen in 2019’s Midsommar, as you’ll see in the list below of the Best Horror Movie From Every Year.

    The Best Horror Movie From Every Year

    Counting down more than a century’s worth of monsters, demons and things that go bump in the night.

    Gallery Credit: Michael Gallucci

    READ MORE: 10 Great Horror Movies Audiences Hated (At First)

    10 Times Suspiciously Similar Films Came Out at the Same Time

    No, you’re not going crazy: these are all different movies. 

    Gallery Credit: Emma Stefansky

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    Michael Gallucci

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  • Daily Evening Randomness by Hendy

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    “The mother art is architecture. Without an architecture of our own we have no soul of our own civilization”

    Architecture is all around us… it’s part of the rhythm of everyday life. If you’re lucky, you might find yourself surrounded by some of the most breathtaking examples in the world.

    I’ll never fully understand how humanity has managed to create structures so massive yet so beautiful, but that’s alright. I’m just here to marvel at them.. even the small ones. It’s truly incredible.

    Welcome to Daily Evening Randomness, a nightcap at theCHIVE where we unwind for the night under a random theme. Tonight, we’re looking at architecture & Design.

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    Hendy

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  • 2005 Movies That Could Never Be Made Today

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    2005 doesn’t seem that long ago. I remember 2005 well. I had a flip phone. It was great.

    But 2005 is also 20 years ago now. And when I was a kid, a movie that was 20 years old was ancient. For example, if I went on one of my weekly vists to Blockbuster Video at any point during my prime movie-obsessed teen years, and I rented a film from 1974 — like let’s say Francis Ford Coppola’s The Conversation — I would have patted myself on the back for broadening my cinematic horizons with an old, old movie.

    So with certain amount of reluctance, I must state for the record: A movie released in 2005 is now an old, old movie. It sucks, it’s not fair, but it is true.

    As evidence of that truth, I humbly submit the following list of 2005 titles that are so much of a bygone era they could not be made today. The reasons why vary from title to title. In some cases, their subject matter would not fly with modern tastes. In others, the filmmakers chosen to adapt that subject matter to the screen would never get hired now. In others, the whole film is based on dated concepts or properties that hold very little marquee value in the 2020s.

    What these titles share regardless of their genre or creative team is my firm belief that none of them would be produced and then released to theaters today. There’s just no way. I’d bet my flip phone on it.

    2005 Movies That Could Never Be Made Today

    These movies are only 20 years old. They almost certainly couldn’t be made today.

    READ MORE: 10 Great Movies Where the Hero Is Secretly the Villain

    20 Sequels That Were Drastically Different From the Original

    These movies are all sequels, but they don’t look much like the films that inspired them.

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    Matt Singer

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  • DI-Why didn’t you just hire a handyman?

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    This is not a celebration of shiplap and subway tile, but a solemn, perhaps slightly sarcastic, tribute to every budget renovation gone spectacularly awry. Step inside to witness the true aftermath of watching a 30-minute HGTV special.

    Here, you’ll find plumbing that defies physics, electrical wiring that whispers sweet nothings to the fire marshal, and design choices that can only be described as a battle between a clearance bin and a blindfolded homeowner. These questionable DIYs are proof that sometimes, the only thing worse than the original state of the house is the finished project.

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    Stephen

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  • Daily Evening Randomness by Hendy

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    “Fuel, freedom, and the roar of the engine, that’s happiness.”

    I’ve never been a big car guy. My friends used to wonder why I didn’t give a sh!t about the Lambo that zipped by us while we were out. My answer to them?

    “I like classic cars. There’s just something f*cking cool about them. I’d take a classic car over a new luxury car any day of the week.”

    Welcome to Daily Evening Randomness, your daily nightcap at theCHIVE where we wind down for the evening under a random gallery theme. Tonight’s choice: Classic Cars.

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    Hendy

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  • Kathy Ryan On Curating Joy Through Different Artists’ Lenses

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    In capturing joy, Mickalene Thomas stayed close to home. Zach Hilty/BFA.com

    Those who enjoy photography have had a hard time in recent years. Because it is associated with the apps through which people of all ages communicate, it is taken for background—as that thing that distracts you from your DMs. The art boom caused the medium to be neglected at galleries (because you can’t really see the same ROI on photography that you can with painting), and now that the market is down, the only answer seems to be smaller paintings. It’s always been a little surprising that Apple, which is occasionally the most valuable company in the world, would commission a photography exhibition alongside the launch of its new iPhones. But they’ve done exhibitions for the past two releases, and the latest iteration staged in Chelsea, London and Shanghai simultaneously felt like it could have passed for your average gallery show.

    Held at the old Petzel space on 18th Street, “Joy, in 3 Parts” was curated by Kathy Ryan, longtime director of photography at the New York Times Magazine. The show brought together works by Inez & Vinoodh, Mickalene Thomas and Trunk Xu, each tasked with interpreting joy. The result was three bodies of work that were handsome and strange, a credit to Ryan’s flexibility.

    A color photograph taken at the beach shows a silhouetted couple holding hands under a pier at sunset while another person splashes in the water and others walk in the background.A color photograph taken at the beach shows a silhouetted couple holding hands under a pier at sunset while another person splashes in the water and others walk in the background.
    Trunk Xu, Untitled, 2025. © Trunk Xu

    Inez & Vinoodh used the prompt to tell a love story about their son and his partner over five images. “They saw joy as their son’s love story,” Ryan told Observer, in part because it reminded them of their own meeting at art school. The artists were inspired by Zabriskie Point (1970) and its desert landscape, and so took the opportunity to travel to Marfa, Texas, for their shoot.

    There are shades of Badlands (1973), too. In Marfa, the besotted couple is accompanied by a red fabric that becomes its own character—a veil, a flag, a cocoon. Sure, the fabric basically symbolizes the love between the two kids, but in no way does this come off as corny. “Whenever their work goes into the surreal, something magical always happens,” Ryan said. “That red cloth became almost like a character.”

    The sequence flanks three vivid color images with black-and-white portraits. One key frame—Charles and Natalie running with the red fabric behind them—was transformed when the sun broke through clouds. “You plan and plan, and then you hope serendipity kicks in,” Ryan said. “Just before the sun went down, we got that terrific rainbow flare.”

    Where Inez & Vinoodh looked outward, Mickalene Thomas stayed close to home. She chose Fort Greene Park, her local Brooklyn greenspace, and captured neighborhood life in seemingly candid encounters: dancers, rope jumpers, a couple in a hammock. Initially shot in color, the series turned during editing. “After the first morning, she said, ‘You know what: I’m seeing this in black and white,’” Ryan said. “It strips away unnecessary noise and lets you lean into rhythm, form and emotion.”

    It’s a bold move for someone associated with her use of color. According to Ryan, Thomas said politics were behind the choice. She wanted to represent Black people outside of the context of labor. “This work counters that narrative,” Ryan said, “exploring rest as a form of resistance, power, and self-reclamation.” They feel documentary, cinematic and natural all at once.

    A gallery wall shows four large color photographs side by side, depicting scenes such as beachgoers at sunset, a woman by a pink kiddie pool, a figure on a hotel bed, and people in costumes with fairy wings.A gallery wall shows four large color photographs side by side, depicting scenes such as beachgoers at sunset, a woman by a pink kiddie pool, a figure on a hotel bed, and people in costumes with fairy wings.
    How Trunk Xu visualizes joy. Zach Hilty/BFA.com

    Meanwhile, Beijing-born, Los Angeles-based Trunk Xu staged his contributions in a more obvious way and chose to confront the omnipresence of cameras in daily life. “The whole idea was fine art, not ads,” she said. But he was adamant, in a good way. To him, joy is wrapped up in the process of documenting. “The picture itself and the making of the picture is part of that dance with life.” His tableaux show skaters, beachgoers and couples photographing one another on their phones, but in subtle and unorthodox ways, with tight composition.

    Ryan closed our conversation by situating the phone within photography’s long arc: from 8×10 plates to 35mm reportage, Polaroid experiments and now pocket devices with multiple 48MP sensors. My favorite of Xu’s images involved a pool shot that seemed to be captured by several people, but ironically, you can’t see any of their phones.

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