How bad cities can kill us (and better cities might cure us)
Cholera no longer infects our water supplies but other threats lurk in our cities - Shaping Cities has a way forward

Putnam & Putnam create an autumn display for Martha Stewart
New York City's greatest floral designers prove there's more to flowers than simple summer blooms

Cool Designs for Cultured Kids – The Giulia Rocking Horse
Can you afford kids and a Maserati? Then try this stylish Italian toy featured in new book Design for Children

These cat homes will make your home look good too
Get your beloved kitty a bit of furniture like this and you’ll soon be feline very house proud . . .

How better cities will save the world
By locking in good habits with infrastructure the mega cities of the future could help us avert ecological disaster

These Brutalist War memorials have very brutal back stories
World War II hit the former Yugoslavia hard and it has many poignant concrete creations to commemorate it

Destination Art you can get to in your lunch break
Are you in a big city? Got an hour to spare? Then get out and see some art from our new book Destination Art

Destination Art that looks like a LOT of fun!
Find art difficult sometimes? Don't fret. Take a look at these works in Destination Art and you'll soon by smiling

Sketch to Skyline - what Louis Kahn’s Salk Institute in La Jolla, California looked like on day one
Did you know Kahn originally planned a garden in the middle of the site? Drawing Architecture takes up the story

Cool Designs for Cultured Kids - Alexander Girard's dolls
Discover how Herman Miller's design director channelled his love of folk art and bright colours into these figures

Great Art in the Great Outdoors
Sometimes it pays to think outside the white-walled box as our new book Destination Art shows

The surprisingly bookish origins of German trifle
Discover a story of rich lives and tragic decline behind the sweet Lübeck-style trifle in The German Cookbook

Cool Designs for Cultured Kids - The Radio Flyer Wagon
Here’s how an ambitious Italian-American created a cheap, safe wagon and earned himself the name ‘Little Ford’

"What is the size of ‘we’?" – Olafur Eliasson on public art, building bridges, and his Experience of togetherness
Eliasson understands the limits of civic engagement, but says he is trying to push the envelope nevertheless

Do you recognise these Brutalist buildings from the big screen?
From sci-fi to horror, indie drama to LA caper, movie makers love a Brutalist backdrop, as our new Atlas notes

Robert Venturi dies aged 93
The American architect, whose work helped define postmodernism, died on Tuesday in Philadelphia

Lucian Freud Slices of Life - The Latter Years
The passing years didn’t dim Freud’s ambition - in fact his talent, along with his canvas sizes, grew as he aged

Lucian Freud Slices of Life - The Middle Years
A friendly intervention by the Palace helped Freud and his family escape peril - half a century later he repaid the debt

Lucian Freud Slices of Life - The Early Years
The artist mixed with rogues and royals in his early London life and kept in touch with both during his gambling days

The surprisingly British origins of German currywurst
The street food was first cooked with a little help from Germany’s enemies as The German Cookbook explains

Cool Designs for Cultured Kids - The Frisbee
Discover how an amateur American designer took a cake tin and turned it into one of the world’s most popular toys

These Brutalist buildings look like they shouldn't stay up
A smart choice of materials and techniques enables architects to dazzle as Atlas of Brutalist Architecture reveals

Scholten & Baijings rework afternoon tea in London
The Dutch design duo has filled Fortnum & Mason with pale green products for their new tea installation

A Brutalist guide to Open House London
Londoners – here’s how to satisfy your craving for mid-century concrete this coming weekend

What is it with Sarah Lucas and eggs?
Volunteers just smashed 1,000 eggs at the artist’s request - our new book explains why she works with them

Astonishing Animals – The Male Diving Beetle
The microscopic intricacy of this insect’s foot belies a deeply sinister mating habit

The surprisingly political origins of German pickled herring
How Otto von Bismarck came to lend his name to one of Germany’s best-loved seafood dishes

Look who turned up at our Kate Moss book launch!
Kate stopped by to see photographer boyfriend Mario Sorrenti as we publish the photos that wowed Calvin Klein

'Street dance is crucial' – Olafur Eliasson on Harlem Gun Crew, his teenage years and the Experience of space
Eliasson doesn’t hide his early breakdancing achievements; instead he incorporates them into his artistic career

These Brutalist buildings are actually really beautiful
It might not be known for its pretty ornamentation or well-balanced forms but Brutalism can still embody beauty

Sketch to Skyline - what Foreign Office Architects' Yokohama International Ferry Terminal looked like on day one
Sometimes the finished structure doesn't look much like the drawing - as this early ink on paper sketch reveals

Astonishing Animals – The Spoonworm
These six different images depict one obscure marine animal, captured by one dedicated photographer

How the cities of the future will look
80% of urban infrastructure that will exist in 2050 isn't built yet. Ricky Burdett is about to give us a sneak peak

The surprisingly sacred origins of German pretzels
Read how old prayer traditions found their way into popular baked goods, according to The German Cookbook

Putnam & Putnam fill trucks with flowers for Gaga designer
Michael and Darroch Putnam give fashion director Brandon Maxwell's tailgate-themed show a floral accompaniment

Anna Dello Russo lights up Fifth Avenue
The Italian super stylist was joined by top models and designers at her NY Fashion Week party earlier this week

How Roald Dahl ended up with a Bacon Portrait of Freud
On Roald Dahl day, we take a closer look at the author’s love of these monumental British artists

‘An exhibition is like a small weather system’ - Olafur Eliasson on art, audience and the Experience of putting on a show

U2 play Massimo Bottura’s Refettorio Paris
Bono and the band took an opportunity during their tour to entertain guests at Massimo's Bread Is Gold restaurant

Wolfgang Tillmans makes a return to the photocopier
The photographer says his first camera was the copy machine and he’s gone back to the office staple for a new show

How Ernö Goldfinger brutalised both east and west
The architect built iconic towers on both sides of London - and was immortalised as a Bond baddie

Sketch to Skyline - What Richard Rogers and Renzo Piano's Pompidou Centre in Paris looked like on day one
This cultural centre in a rundown part of Paris epitomised 'the Bilbao effect' years before the term was coined

‘I grew up surrounded by art that embraced abstraction, mythology and allowed space for imagination' - Olafur Eliasson on landscape, Experience and the art his father made

Now you can cook like Massimo Bottura (kind of)
The chef and philanthropist has designed his own range of cooking toys - with a little help from Grundig

Astonishing Animals – The Mite Harvestman
Frozen in a thin layer of gold and captured by a scanning electron microscope this creature is barely 2mm long

Betak brings blooms, Bieber and a library to NY Fashion Week
The acclaimed show producer works with Jason Wu, Putnam & Putnam and Kate Spade at this season’s NYFW

The art that Daniel Arsham fits in around Snarkitecture
Fossilised cars, phones, cameras, guitars and boom boxes - how he switches from commission to gallery

What The New Museum is bringing to London next month
Expect screens, beds, reflections on the past and predictions for the future at Strange Days

Sex, cigarettes and spongey bread - the things Wolfgang Tillmans loved about London in the Eighties
The New Yorker's profile of the photographer includes some telling details from his early trips to Britain

Sagmeister & Walsh want to bring back beauty
The pioneering designers say we no longer appreciate or value beauty, even when it makes for better design

Why Olafur Eliasson just met with Emmanuel Macron
The artist and the French President both agree on Europe, even if Eliasson sees room for healthy disagreement

‘Nature has become fragile’ - Olafur Eliasson on melting glaciers and his Experience of a changing climate

John Pawson pays homage to Agnes Martin's grids
The minimalist architect references Martin’s famous Sixties grid paintings in these recently posted images

Sketch to Skyline - what Le Corbusier's Unité d'Habitation in Marseilles looked like on day one
This simple colour-coded sketch from the master helped define the style of public housing for years to come

3 cute doggy pics from our Feed Me book (and one less so!)
Cook your companion one of the 50 dishes from our new book, and you could end up with a dog looking this happy

Alex Katz's Coca-Cola Girls are coming to London
The New York artist reveals the Rembrandt and soda-pop inspirations behind his latest paintings

Astonishing Animals – The Pigeon
Scott Echols's ghoulish bird image is the result of an innovative technology that helps us see inside animals

How to sound clever about Supreme’s Mike Kelley collection
Learn how Kelley worked childhood, craft and creepiness into the pieces Supreme is reproducing

‘Encountering a work of art is about recognition, about feeling listened to’ - Olafur Eliasson on art, Experience and uncertainty

Sketch to Skyline - what The Shard looked like on day one
Here's how the iconic building took form when Renzo Piano first put his trademark green pen to paper in 2000

Want to buy the best tortellini? Ask Massimo Bottura!
Want to help autistic kids and enjoy the finest pasta available? Massimo can point you in the right direction

The story behind JR’s New NYC piece
The pasted-up work, on the Bowery, offers a glimpse into the life of an undocumented immigrant

Astonishing Animals – The Fruit Bat
Nick Veasey's radiographic photo is just one of 300 amazing images in Animal: Exploring the Zoological World

It's time to vibe up your vases!
3 simple tips for your floral arrangements from Putnam & Putnam, NYC’s brightest floral designers

Andy's Athletes - OJ Simpson
The stories behind Warhol's encounters with sports stars of the Seventies - as pictured in the Catalogue Raisonné

Astonishing Animals – The Sweat Bee
Responsible for 80 per cent of pollination in the world this creature's waning population is a big danger for us

Magnus Nilsson is back - and he's got cakes!
And breads, and pastries, and cookies, and scones, and lots of porridge - all to be found in The Nordic Baking Book

Trevor Paglen launches into his critics
Artist comes out fighting against astronomers who claim launch of his Orbital Reflector just means more space junk

Astonishing Animals – The Diana Monkey
Jill Greenberg manipulates her hyperrealist photographs to emphasise the connection between us and them

Andy's Athletes - Jack Nicklaus
The stories behind Warhol's encounters with sports stars of the Seventies - as pictured in the Catalogue Raisonné

There's more to German cuisine than Currywurst!
Overlooked and unloved until now, The German Cookbook will totally change your view on this varied cuisine

Francis Alÿs, his fiery football and other artworks
On his 59th birthday we take a look at what makes the Contemporary Artist series artist so hot right now

Astonishing Animals – The Steppe Bison
Painted 17,000 years ago, using sophisticated techniques, there's a lot more to this image than you think

Andy's Athletes - Muhammad Ali
The stories behind Warhol's encounters with sports stars of the Seventies - as pictured in the Catalogue Raisonné

Eero Saarinen's only UK building is still a great one
On the anniversary of his birth read how his proto-brutalist American Embassy broke the modernist mould

Astonishing Animals – Cai Guo-Qiang's Heritage Installation
Spectacular artwork featured in our new book Animal, depicts a scene that could never actually occur in nature

Theaster Gates on the artist representing the US at Venice 2019
Watch Gates interview the acclaimed abstract sculptor Martin Puryear, due to represent the US at the next Biennale

Iggy Pop has just recreated this Warhol burger video
The singer follows Warhol’s actions faithfully, right down to the slightly odd way he applies ketchup to the dish

Alejandro Aravena mixes a bank and a bridge to help the poor
The architect’s new proposal for Buenos Aires Villa 31 neighbourhood will help the city’s poorest cross the tracks

Runners! Our Where to Drink Beer author has a brew for you
Jeppe Jarnit-Bjergsø’s Evil Twin Brewing has worked with another runner and beverage expert to create Race Day

'I have a duty to preserve it' - Why Tillmans still shoots nightlife
Wolfgang celebrates his 50th today and wants you to see what it was like back in the day - and what it's like now

When Steve McCurry shot the Indian monsoon
A near fatal fall onto rocks, leeches crawling up his back and a wade through water with dead animals all around. On Indian Independence Day Steve McCurry recalls the 'masochism' of his first monsoon trip to India

In Praise of Paul Rand
On the anniversary of his birth take the opportunity to gem up on the undisputed godfather of graphic design

Astonishing Animals – The Lion’s Mane Jellyfish
This beauty has 100 feet long tentacles with thousands of microscopic harpoons that inject a paralysing venom

Thomas Bayrle on Elvis, America and Jacques Tati
Bayrle has much in common with more critical artists, but don't overlook the joy and humour in his pictures

Andy's Athletes - Willie Shoemaker
The stories behind Warhol's encounters with sports stars of the Seventies - as pictured in the Catalogue Raisonné

Astonishing Animals – The Monarch of the Glen
New book Animal is a magnificent menagerie of imagery, documenting animals of all kinds throughout the ages

Zhang Xiaogang reflects on more disquieting memories
The Chinese artist draws on his personal recollections in a new exhibition of emotionally charged pictures

Edmund de Waal brings the émigré experience to LA
The artist and writer’s forthcoming installation at the Schindler House in LA draws on its maker’s Viennese heritage

Annie Leibovitz, Cai Guo-Qiang and a robot get RISD awards
American photographer and Chinese artist joined by artificial presence at Rhode Island School of Design ceremony

It’s OK if you don’t understand Olafur Eliasson’s new show
The artist may be referencing the environment in Beijing, but the show’s title suggests it's all open to interpretation

Can new technology bring back lost art?
Noah Charney on how destroyed artworks - and fake Old Masters - are being remade for today's museums

Could you picture your cat in a place like this?
On International Cat Day, we pick out a few purrfect kitty dwellings from our new book, Pet-tecture

Scholten & Baijings remix IKEA
Dutch design duo's colourful update of IKEA classics will find their way into many design fans’ homes

Erik Kessels swaps 35,000 snaps for a few brass band LPs
The photo editor returns to the Festival Images Vevey biennial with a show focussing on collective creativity

Olafur Eliasson brings gin, cinnamon, ceramics to his pop-up
The artist and his sister source Icelandic produce and culture for their new restaurant, opening this weekend

Is Owen Luder Britain’s most brutal architect?
The creator of Gateshead’s Trinity Square and Portsmouth’s Tricorn Centre celebrates his 90th birthday today

How Thomas Bayrle commodified sex
The German artist saw his country's attitude to sex change and decided to paint it unemotionally
![Feure im Weizen (Herzensbrecher) [Fire in the Wheat (Heartbreakerl)] 1970 by Thomas Bayrle. All images reproduced in our book Thomas Bayrle Playtime](/resource/bayrlesex.jpg)
Three New York City gardens to cool off in this lunchtime
Beat the heat in these chilled public gardens, all of which feature in our new book, Green Escapes

Andy Warhol would have been 90 today
To celebrate we take a look at how Andy's wildly differing self-portraits shaped his public persona and myth
