Art Ambera Wellmann materializes mortal landscapes For Document’s Fall/Winter 2024–25 issue, the painter unveils a suite of large-scale paintings that fuse mysterious environments with beings alive and dead
Architecture Building from the inside George Yabu and Glenn Pushelberg of Yabu Pushelberg Document sits down with the duo behind the boundary-breaking interiors firm to trace how their personal and professional histories inform their forward-looking designs
Literature Fine Print: Did Michel Houellebecq steal Thomas Bernhard’s coat? In his monthly column, Drew Zeiba hunts for clues in the controversial French author’s latest novel, ‘Annihilation’
Film Ena Sendijarević’s cinema of migration and memory Document sits down with the Bosnian filmmaker to discuss how diaspora shapes her slow cinema-inflected storytelling
Above the Fold Amazon is reading palms at Whole Foods Biometric payment technology is a slippery slope to becoming one with our digital footprints, raising concerns about data privacy and customer surveillance by Morgan Becker Above the Fold Ekene Ijeoma reveals the revolutionary potential of data-based art Driven by an activist spirit, the artist and MIT assistant professor creates participatory installations that reveal urgent truths about our unjust world by Morgan Becker Above the Fold Europe’s new data protection laws are a confusing mess that might change the world for better The European Union's new data privacy rule, which went into effect last week, is the reason your inbox has been a mess for the last... by Caroline Christie Above the Fold How Grindr and Facebook are networking shame The dangers of innocuous data have never been more visible until now. by Caroline Christie Above the Fold Imagining the end of Facebook, for the first time As the Cambridge Analytica revelations widen, the company's demise no longer seems like a fantastical possibility. by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold Amazon is reading palms at Whole Foods Biometric payment technology is a slippery slope to becoming one with our digital footprints, raising concerns about data privacy and customer surveillance by Morgan Becker
Above the Fold Ekene Ijeoma reveals the revolutionary potential of data-based art Driven by an activist spirit, the artist and MIT assistant professor creates participatory installations that reveal urgent truths about our unjust world by Morgan Becker
Above the Fold Europe’s new data protection laws are a confusing mess that might change the world for better The European Union's new data privacy rule, which went into effect last week, is the reason your inbox has been a mess for the last... by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold How Grindr and Facebook are networking shame The dangers of innocuous data have never been more visible until now. by Caroline Christie
Above the Fold Imagining the end of Facebook, for the first time As the Cambridge Analytica revelations widen, the company's demise no longer seems like a fantastical possibility. by Caroline Christie