
The Picture with Denise Grünstein
Photographer Denise Grünstein on her photograph Enfant Terrible.
Photographer Denise Grünstein on her photograph Enfant Terrible.
Delving into the enigma that is Georgia O'Keeffe, an exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum considers how the artist sculpted her own persona.
Raoul Peck’s powerful documentary examines race in America through the eyes of acclaimed writer James Baldwin.
Remembering Six Magazine by Comme des Garçons—a short-lived, explorative journey into the sixth sense.
Adia Trischler—film director, creative director and stylist—selects five films to mark the close of Black History Month.
Philanthropist Hikari Yokoyama on five books that changed her thinking on gender and the balance of power.
Bertil Nilsson explains the shared experience behind his stirring photograph Mario 2014.
If the 40-hour work week feels long, remind yourself that the weekend is even longer.
Why is it that humans can perceive a million colors but only remember a fraction of them?
Rereading books is like meeting old friends: The characters we thought we knew challenge us to incorporate fresh understanding.
Touching countless readers with theories on love, language and literature, Roland Barthes turned his attention to an unlikely material: plastic.
Adia Trischler speaks about life on set and the difference between having it all and doing it all.
Turn on, tune in, zone out: The pleasures and phenomena of half listening.
Creatives from six different cities tell the tales of their weekend adventures.
Do other people make us laugh, or are we laughing at other people? A comedian offers advice on where to draw the line.
How is it that throughout history, similar ideas have often cropped up in different locations and, at times, seemingly simultaneously?
In 1968, at the height of the civil rights movement, Arthur Mitchell founded Dance Theatre of Harlem.
Is there a difference between chance and coincidence? Alex Anderson explores whether happenstance can ever really “just happen.”
Composer Leonard Bernstein spent the summer of 1967 in Ansedonia, a sun-washed Roman town on the Italian coast.
Kiyomi Iwata shares her advice on how to create art while on the seesaw of children and career.
Here, Harriet Fitch Little goes deep into sleep to find that, much like the human body itself, there’s no perfect formula.
Silent through the height of her stardom in the 1960s and absent at the peak of her career, an enigmatic sculptor receives a renaissance in death.
For one photographer, an unusual concern: how to create images that are not too beautiful.
“Cynicism is actually the laziest stance you could take.” What intelligent people still need to learn about the pursuit of wisdom.
Neuroscientist Paul Dudchenko speaks on why we get lost, the distress and thrill of disorientation and how getting lost can improve your skills.
Kinfolk.com uses cookies to personalize and deliver appropriate content, analyze website traffic and display advertising. Visit our cookie policy to learn more. By clicking "Accept" you agree to our terms and may continue to use Kinfolk.com.