Trump shows farmers printed pictures of his reflecting pool project during rambling roundtable event
Trump boasted about the size of the newly renovated Lincoln Memorial reflecting pool in a rally-style roundtable event
๐ฌ๐ง ์๊ตญ ยท "REFLECT" ยท ์ด 31๊ฑด
ํํฐ ๋ณด๊ธฐํ์ฌ ์ง์
50.0
0 = ๋ถ์ ์ฐ์ธ
50 = ์ค๋ฆฝ
100 = ๊ธ์ ์ฐ์ธ
์ต๊ทผ 7์ผ ๊ธฐ์ค 4,045๊ฑด์ ๋ถ์ํ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ, ๋ด์ค ์ฌ๋ฆฌ์ง์๋ 50.0(๊ท ํ)์ ๋๋ค. ๊ธ์ 1๊ฑด(0.0%)ยท์ค๋ฆฝ 4,043๊ฑด(100.0%)ยท๋ถ์ 1๊ฑด(0.0%)์ด๋ฉฐ, ์ค๋ฆฝ ๋น์ค์ด ๋๋ ทํ๊ฒ ๋์ต๋๋ค. ์ฑํฅ ์ง์๋ ์ข ํฉ 1.1(์ค๋ ๊ท ํ)์ ๋๋ค.
Trump boasted about the size of the newly renovated Lincoln Memorial reflecting pool in a rally-style roundtable event
Modern Art, London The mathematically named new works of Along the River are disorienting, illusive and seem to offer a flash of the secret sequences that underpin the physical world Why do we find things beautiful? More precisely, why do some paintings of coloured dots in rippling patterns inspire in me something like revelation? The idea that beauty is the feeling you get when encountering truth is unfashionable in the arts, but lingers in the sciences. The physicist Paul Dirac once proposed that it is more important that a formula is beautiful than that it can be proven: when a perfectly beautiful theory produces results that cannot be real, he argued, then we should not discard the theory but reconsider what is real. Since the 1970s, Terry Winters has been rebuilding that bridge between art and science. Taking inspiration from disciplines including botany โ his early paintings, particularly, evoke sprouting pods and tangled roots โ engineering, computer modelling and cybernetics, his paintings might be understood as diagrammatic approximations of the patterns that govern everything from the division of cells to the constellation of stars. If every era has to renew its standards of beauty to reflect new understandings of how the world is constructed, then Winters comes as close to providing that model as any living painter. Continue reading...
It appeared to reference a widely-circulated video of a woman crying during Trumpโs first inauguration
After weeks of renovation, water has begun refilling the historic pool, which has been coated in a colour named "American flag blue".
Trump stated the work to paint the shallow basin a deep โAmerican flag blueโ was finished on Wednesday
Somerset House, London Escherโs paradoxical geometries and impossible gravities may baffle the mind โ yet even his wildest works were never just fanciful, as this fun and gripping show makes clear We think we know the world of Maurits Cornelis Escher with its mind-bending staircases and buildings that impossibly twist upon themselves. Yet a shocking glimpse of reality intrudes in Somerset Houseโs gripping journey through his metaverse. In 1945, Escher designed a diploma for students at a temporary academy in Eindhoven, recently liberated from Nazi rule. Behind a wise old owl in the foreground, twisting columns of black smoke rise from a riverside town, their evil sinuousness reflected in the water. The message of this depiction of war is not only that Escher was a civilised individual surviving a brutal age but also that his visual delights were never just fanciful. Even his wildest speculations reveal the workings of the world itself, grounded as they are in what Galileo called โthe language of mathematicsโ in which โthe book of nature is writtenโ. You donโt have to be fluent in that language to lose yourself in Escherโs art. You just need to look, and this exhibition lets you look so much more closely and deeply than you can in books and reproductions and imitations of his work. At times you feel you are actually inside his paradoxical places. I chuckled for ages in front of his 1958 lithograph Belvedere in which a king and queen survey a mountainous landscape in different directions from two storeys of a Renaissance building, but wait, they donโt just face different ways, their separate floors are totally at odds, the kingโs pointing sideways while the queen faces out of the picture in a 90-degree shift: the columns on the front of the kingโs balustrade support the back of the queenโs floor and the whole building turns in two different dimensions inhabiting two truths at once. No wonder the builders are dressed as jesters while an architect sits studying geometry. Continue reading...
Legal infographics that reflect a Turkish nation in flux.
The mother's lawyer Madeleine Avenell SC argued her client's actions might not have reflected an understanding that killing her children was wrong.
Politiciansโ statements reflect difficulty facing pro-Israel Democrats as voter support for country falls US politics live โ latest updates Several prominent New York Democrats who participated in the cityโs annual Israel Day parade on Sunday have condemned the participation of Bezalel Smotrich, the far-right Israeli finance minister and a leading figure in the Israeli settler movement, in the event. Smotrich was among several Israeli lawmakers and cabinet officials who marched in the parade on Sunday. His appearance marked his first trip to the US in more than a year, and came less than month after he said the international criminal court (ICC) was seeking an arrest warrant against him. Continue reading...
Royal Kennel Club figures show significant declines in registrations of French bulldogs, bulldogs and pugs Squashed-face dogs including pugs and French bulldogs are declining in popularity, data suggests, with experts hopeful the trend reflects a growing awareness of the health problems such breeds face. According to breed registration statistics from the UKโs Royal Kennel Club (RKC), there were 1,400 registrations of French bulldogs in the first three months of 2026 โ a 37% drop compared with the same period in 2025. Bulldog registrations dropped by 34% and pug registrations by 43% with only 126 of the breed registered in the first three months of 2026. Continue reading...
The 85-year-old actress and comedian made the comments at the Hay Festival in Powys where she also reflected on her Jewish upbringing.
The $13.1M, no-bid renovation of the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool doesnโt address its leaky plumbing system
As its third season ends, Sam Levinsonโs HBO show reflects the grim future that gen Z faces. Its rage-bait is precisely the point The third season of Euphoria has been almost impossible to ignore for anyone with a smartphone. The HBO drama, which started off in 2019 following a group of hedonistic, privileged teens, has evolved into televisionโs answer to rage-bait, creating moments that are specifically designed to dominate the news feed with memes and outrage. Even before we reach the season finale, weโve seen OnlyFans storylines, pup play, sugar daddies, mummification fetishes, a disastrous wedding, fingers and toes being sliced off, venomous snake attacks, cockatoo assassinations (RIP Paladin), gangster shootouts and (several) characters being buried alive. In season three, Euphoria picked up its story five years after the characters graduated from high school. At times, the show has felt lost outside of the high school setting, exploring a confusing mishmash of genres and plots, some of which have been called out for glamorising misogyny and violence. Yet despite these criticisms, the show has a track record of taking bold artistic risks, which is becoming rarer in a content landscape that values quantity over quality. It turned Sam Levinson, its creator, into one of Hollywoodโs most exciting (and polarising) visionaries, and catapulted a new generation of actors into the A-list to the point where it now seems like they have outgrown the show). As season three concludes, Euphoria represents a strange โ and very โ2026โ โ contradiction, where it feels both ridiculous and undeniably influential. Continue reading...
The creator of Itโs a Sin is back โ and heโs furious. His new series Tip Top explores the rise of homophobia through a feud between two Manchester neighbours. He and stars Alan Cumming and David Morrissey talk death, fear and โjoy as a form of protestโ Late at night on Manchesterโs Canal Street, the heart of the cityโs famous queer scene, two neighbours are at war. An escalating feud between gay bar manager Leo (Alan Cumming) and reserved, judgmental neighbour Clive (David Morrissey) shows no sign of abating. Yells from Leo are so loud they echo down the canal. The street is not closed to the public as their altercation plays out, so you canโt tell who in the background is an employee at Leoโs bar, Spit & Polish, who is a regular, and who is a member of the public out for their midweek pint. In the background, an ambulanceโs lights flash while unflappable drag queens continue to flyer for their neighbouring bars. Russell T Daviesโs Tip Toe, a new Channel 4 drama, looks at how political rhetoric, toxic online bullying and misinformation can add jet fuel to a feud between neighbours. The location of the series wonโt be lost on viewers of Queer As Folk. The 1999 classic, which regularly featured scenes shot in Canal Street, followed the lives of three gay men, in a way that not only made being gay seem cool, it also reflected a new era of tolerance. Viewers took from it that the future could only be bright. Continue reading...
London exhibition explores how care and protest improved rights and dignity of those living with disease From photos of a mass โdie-inโ by Aids activists in Trafalgar Square, London, in the 1990s to plushie breasts, lips and vulvas hand-stitched by HIV-positive women, a new exhibition explores how care and protest have improved the rights and dignity of those living with the disease. The show, Tenderness and Rage, at the Wellcome Collection, London, reflects how different groups affected by HIV, including gay men, women of colour, and refugees in the UK and around the world have found power, solidarity, comfort and joy in Aids activism and support services. Continue reading...
As she marks her 70th birthday on Friday, La Toya will no doubt be reflecting on her turbulent past and how she overcame such adversity to get here.
Experts say the numbers may also reflect the wide scope of Nevadaโs kidnapping laws
Wicked co-star said reactions to the incident, which included suggestions she was Grandeโs โbodyguardโ, reflect an insidious view of Black women Wicked star Cynthia Erivo has said that reactions to the incident at the Singapore premiere of Wicked: For Good, in which she stepped in to fend off a red-carpet invader who grabbed co-star Ariana Grande, revealed โthe insidious nature of how we view Black womenโ and put her off campaigning for Oscars. In an interview with Variety, Erivo said that she and Grande were โterrifiedโ when Johnson Wen jumped a barrier at Universal Studios Singapore and rushed towards them. โNobody moved. Nobody moved. So I moved because my brain went, โGet him away! Get him out of here!โ โฆ And what people couldnโt see is that he wouldnโt let go [of Grande]. He wouldnโt let go. So I just kept pushing at him to get him off.โ Continue reading...
The Virginia-based contractor asked for nearly twice the typical profits, a government analysis reportedly found
Tom Hiddleston reflects on a visit to South Sudan and how it highlights the importance of international aid as it is cut by countries including the UK and US, ahead of playing in Soccer Aid โ which has raised ยฃ120m for Unicef