Two’s enough
In life and in art, the doppelgänger can be friend or foe.
A 2020 YWCA White Plains & Central Westchester Visionary Award winner and a 2018 Folio Women in Media Award Winner, Georgette Gouveia is the author of “Burying the Dead,” “Daimon: A Novel of Alexander the Great” and "Seamless Sky" (JMS Books), as well as “The Penalty for Holding,” a 2018 Lambda Literary Award finalist (JMS Books), and “Water Music” (Greenleaf Book Group). They’re part of her series of novels, “The Games Men Play,” also the name of the sports/culture blog she writes. Her short story “The Glass Door,” about love in the time of the coronavirus, was recently published by JMS. Read WAG’s serialization of “Seamless Sky” here. For more, visit thegamesmenplay.com.
In life and in art, the doppelgänger can be friend or foe.
It’s one racket sport you can enjoy here outdoors in the winter.
Fashion illustration gets its due in a new show celebrating 100 years of its “visionaries.”
Singer Tony Bennett brings his accomplished paintings to The Art Students League.
Chloe Mendel — daughter of Gilles Mendel of J. Mendel fame – is putting her own spin on following in her family’s furrier-fashion footsteps.
Shelby Saer has turned a family history of ALS into fighting this rare, devastating disease as co-chair of the board of Packard Center ALS Research at Johns Hopkins.
Fall Call Solutions LLC is designed to make medical alert simpler and smarter.
We close out our year of “Fascinations” with a consideration of time, one of our most challenging subjects, not because it’s such a difficult theme but because we never seem to have enough of it and always seem to be fighting it, as you’ll see in our opening essay.
What if we went with time instead of fighting it?
However spectacular introspective winter, joyous spring, sultry summer and bountiful fall/autumn may be individually, the group has been unbeatable as a brand, particularly when it comes to its greatest iteration, Vivaldi’s “The Four Seasons.”
The Four Seasons in midtown reflects the wealth, power and glamour of New York.
Paul Revere was a lot more than the man who alerted fellow colonists that “the British are coming.”
The railroad carries us from the past to the future through a present filled with strangers, freedom, adventure, boredom, heartache, tragedy and hope.
The New York Botanical Garden’s 28th annual holiday spectacular salutes Central Park.
Graff trends in new timepieces.
Sing Sing Prison Museum, which will be previewed at the end of next year, traces a trajectory from despair to reform and rehabilitation.
Nenad Bach – composer and peace activist – found a way to ease his Parkinson’s through pingpong.
Past, present and future team as Jeremy Rhizor’s Academy of Sacred Drama brings little-known oratorios to WAG country.
Being her own woman helped make Sophia Loren a great star.
Or when a passion transforms your work life.