More “What Matters” columns are here! For those not familiar with my weekly column on @print_mag, here’s some details: In February of 2021, I started a new column for @print_mag wherein I ask some of the most creative people in the world 10 of the same questions about life, love, creativity, food, and my favorite: how long the feeling of accomplishing something lasts. The column is called “What Matters” and it is a bit of a Proustian questionnaire with a decidedly creative angle. To see over 150 interviews, you can go to the What Matters link in my bio. If you’d like to participate in the questionnaire please DM me!
More “What Matters” columns are here! For those not familiar with my weekly column on @print_mag, here’s some details: In February of 2021, I started a new column for @print_mag wherein I ask some of the most creative people in the world 10 of the same questions about life, love, creativity, food, and my favorite: how long the feeling of accomplishing something lasts. The column is called “What Matters” and it is a bit of a Proustian questionnaire with a decidedly creative angle. To see over 150 interviews, you can go to the What Matters link in my bio. If you’d like to participate in the questionnaire please DM me!
More “What Matters” columns are here! For those not familiar with my weekly column on @print_mag, here’s some details: In February of 2021, I started a new column for @print_mag wherein I ask some of the most creative people in the world 10 of the same questions about life, love, creativity, food, and my favorite: how long the feeling of accomplishing something lasts. The column is called “What Matters” and it is a bit of a Proustian questionnaire with a decidedly creative angle. To see over 150 interviews, you can go to the What Matters link in my bio. If you’d like to participate in the questionnaire please DM me!
More “What Matters” columns are here! For those not familiar with my weekly column on @print_mag, here’s some details: In February of 2021, I started a new column for @print_mag wherein I ask some of the most creative people in the world 10 of the same questions about life, love, creativity, food, and my favorite: how long the feeling of accomplishing something lasts. The column is called “What Matters” and it is a bit of a Proustian questionnaire with a decidedly creative angle. To see over 150 interviews, you can go to the What Matters link in my bio. If you’d like to participate in the questionnaire please DM me!
More “What Matters” columns are here! For those not familiar with my weekly column on @print_mag, here’s some details: In February of 2021, I started a new column for @print_mag wherein I ask some of the most creative people in the world 10 of the same questions about life, love, creativity, food, and my favorite: how long the feeling of accomplishing something lasts. The column is called “What Matters” and it is a bit of a Proustian questionnaire with a decidedly creative angle. To see over 150 interviews, you can go to the What Matters link in my bio. If you’d like to participate in the questionnaire please DM me!
More “What Matters” columns are here! For those not familiar with my weekly column on @print_mag, here’s some details: In February of 2021, I started a new column for @print_mag wherein I ask some of the most creative people in the world 10 of the same questions about life, love, creativity, food, and my favorite: how long the feeling of accomplishing something lasts. The column is called “What Matters” and it is a bit of a Proustian questionnaire with a decidedly creative angle. To see over 150 interviews, you can go to the What Matters link in my bio. If you’d like to participate in the questionnaire please DM me!
More “What Matters” columns are here! For those not familiar with my weekly column on @print_mag, here’s some details: In February of 2021, I started a new column for @print_mag wherein I ask some of the most creative people in the world 10 of the same questions about life, love, creativity, food, and my favorite: how long the feeling of accomplishing something lasts. The column is called “What Matters” and it is a bit of a Proustian questionnaire with a decidedly creative angle. To see over 150 interviews, you can go to the What Matters link in my bio. If you’d like to participate in the questionnaire please DM me!
More “What Matters” columns are here! For those not familiar with my weekly column on @print_mag, here’s some details: In February of 2021, I started a new column for @print_mag wherein I ask some of the most creative people in the world 10 of the same questions about life, love, creativity, food, and my favorite: how long the feeling of accomplishing something lasts. The column is called “What Matters” and it is a bit of a Proustian questionnaire with a decidedly creative angle. To see over 150 interviews, you can go to the What Matters link in my bio. If you’d like to participate in the questionnaire please DM me!
More “What Matters” columns are here! For those not familiar with my weekly column on @print_mag, here’s some details: In February of 2021, I started a new column for @print_mag wherein I ask some of the most creative people in the world 10 of the same questions about life, love, creativity, food, and my favorite: how long the feeling of accomplishing something lasts. The column is called “What Matters” and it is a bit of a Proustian questionnaire with a decidedly creative angle. To see over 150 interviews, you can go to the What Matters link in my bio. If you’d like to participate in the questionnaire please DM me!
More “What Matters” columns are here! For those not familiar with my weekly column on @print_mag, here’s some details: In February of 2021, I started a new column for @print_mag wherein I ask some of the most creative people in the world 10 of the same questions about life, love, creativity, food, and my favorite: how long the feeling of accomplishing something lasts. The column is called “What Matters” and it is a bit of a Proustian questionnaire with a decidedly creative angle. To see over 150 interviews, you can go to the What Matters link in my bio. If you’d like to participate in the questionnaire please DM me!
@priscilla.gilman grew up in 1970s Manhattan, in an apartment filled with dazzling literary luminaries, including Susan Sontag, Joan Didion and Toni Morrison. She adored her brilliant father, the writer, critic and professor Richard Gilman. When Priscilla was ten years old, her mother, the renowned literary agent Lynn Nesbit, decided to end their marriage. This was followed by a cascade of unexpected revelations that fundamentally changed Priscilla’s perception of her father and her family. Her recent memoir The Critic’s Daughter is a beautiful book about what it means to be the child of a demanding parent, and is a candid account of loss and grief, art and compromise, forgiveness, tenderness and love. Link to listen is in my bio!
In 2003 the artist @esdevlin’s career took a turn. She’d already made her name as a theater designer, where her conceptual and sculptural stage designs had long impressed London theater world. But in 2003 Devlin turned some of her attention to concert set design, and her work impressed pretty much the entire world. She’s done concert sets for Beyonce and Jay Z, for Lady Gaga and Miley Cyrus, for opera festivals, the Olympics and even for the Super Bowl. She also helped launch the Sphere in Las Vegas with her work with U2. There is currently an exhibition of her work at The Smithsonian’s Cooper Hewitt National Design Museum in New York City, and she joins me on this extra special Design Matters interview. Link to listen is in my bio.
Images that follow, all designed by Es Devlin:
Slide 2: Adele in concert
Slide 3: Beyoncé in concert stage design
Slide 4: The Weeknd in concert stage design
Slide 5: Don Giovanni opera stage design
Slide 6: Jay Z and Ye in concert stage design
Slide 7: Royal Ballet stage design
Slide 8: Salome opera stage design
Slide 9: Carmen opera stage design
Slide 10: U2 concert stage design
Cover image in front of her first solo retrospective at the @cooperhewitt Smithsonian National Design Museum, photographed by Jason Ardizzone-West
In 2003 the artist @esdevlin’s career took a turn. She’d already made her name as a theater designer, where her conceptual and sculptural stage designs had long impressed London theater world. But in 2003 Devlin turned some of her attention to concert set design, and her work impressed pretty much the entire world. She’s done concert sets for Beyonce and Jay Z, for Lady Gaga and Miley Cyrus, for opera festivals, the Olympics and even for the Super Bowl. She also helped launch the Sphere in Las Vegas with her work with U2. There is currently an exhibition of her work at The Smithsonian’s Cooper Hewitt National Design Museum in New York City, and she joins me on this extra special Design Matters interview. Link to listen is in my bio.
Images that follow, all designed by Es Devlin:
Slide 2: Adele in concert
Slide 3: Beyoncé in concert stage design
Slide 4: The Weeknd in concert stage design
Slide 5: Don Giovanni opera stage design
Slide 6: Jay Z and Ye in concert stage design
Slide 7: Royal Ballet stage design
Slide 8: Salome opera stage design
Slide 9: Carmen opera stage design
Slide 10: U2 concert stage design
Cover image in front of her first solo retrospective at the @cooperhewitt Smithsonian National Design Museum, photographed by Jason Ardizzone-West
In 2003 the artist @esdevlin’s career took a turn. She’d already made her name as a theater designer, where her conceptual and sculptural stage designs had long impressed London theater world. But in 2003 Devlin turned some of her attention to concert set design, and her work impressed pretty much the entire world. She’s done concert sets for Beyonce and Jay Z, for Lady Gaga and Miley Cyrus, for opera festivals, the Olympics and even for the Super Bowl. She also helped launch the Sphere in Las Vegas with her work with U2. There is currently an exhibition of her work at The Smithsonian’s Cooper Hewitt National Design Museum in New York City, and she joins me on this extra special Design Matters interview. Link to listen is in my bio.
Images that follow, all designed by Es Devlin:
Slide 2: Adele in concert
Slide 3: Beyoncé in concert stage design
Slide 4: The Weeknd in concert stage design
Slide 5: Don Giovanni opera stage design
Slide 6: Jay Z and Ye in concert stage design
Slide 7: Royal Ballet stage design
Slide 8: Salome opera stage design
Slide 9: Carmen opera stage design
Slide 10: U2 concert stage design
Cover image in front of her first solo retrospective at the @cooperhewitt Smithsonian National Design Museum, photographed by Jason Ardizzone-West
In 2003 the artist @esdevlin’s career took a turn. She’d already made her name as a theater designer, where her conceptual and sculptural stage designs had long impressed London theater world. But in 2003 Devlin turned some of her attention to concert set design, and her work impressed pretty much the entire world. She’s done concert sets for Beyonce and Jay Z, for Lady Gaga and Miley Cyrus, for opera festivals, the Olympics and even for the Super Bowl. She also helped launch the Sphere in Las Vegas with her work with U2. There is currently an exhibition of her work at The Smithsonian’s Cooper Hewitt National Design Museum in New York City, and she joins me on this extra special Design Matters interview. Link to listen is in my bio.
Images that follow, all designed by Es Devlin:
Slide 2: Adele in concert
Slide 3: Beyoncé in concert stage design
Slide 4: The Weeknd in concert stage design
Slide 5: Don Giovanni opera stage design
Slide 6: Jay Z and Ye in concert stage design
Slide 7: Royal Ballet stage design
Slide 8: Salome opera stage design
Slide 9: Carmen opera stage design
Slide 10: U2 concert stage design
Cover image in front of her first solo retrospective at the @cooperhewitt Smithsonian National Design Museum, photographed by Jason Ardizzone-West
In 2003 the artist @esdevlin’s career took a turn. She’d already made her name as a theater designer, where her conceptual and sculptural stage designs had long impressed London theater world. But in 2003 Devlin turned some of her attention to concert set design, and her work impressed pretty much the entire world. She’s done concert sets for Beyonce and Jay Z, for Lady Gaga and Miley Cyrus, for opera festivals, the Olympics and even for the Super Bowl. She also helped launch the Sphere in Las Vegas with her work with U2. There is currently an exhibition of her work at The Smithsonian’s Cooper Hewitt National Design Museum in New York City, and she joins me on this extra special Design Matters interview. Link to listen is in my bio.
Images that follow, all designed by Es Devlin:
Slide 2: Adele in concert
Slide 3: Beyoncé in concert stage design
Slide 4: The Weeknd in concert stage design
Slide 5: Don Giovanni opera stage design
Slide 6: Jay Z and Ye in concert stage design
Slide 7: Royal Ballet stage design
Slide 8: Salome opera stage design
Slide 9: Carmen opera stage design
Slide 10: U2 concert stage design
Cover image in front of her first solo retrospective at the @cooperhewitt Smithsonian National Design Museum, photographed by Jason Ardizzone-West
In 2003 the artist @esdevlin’s career took a turn. She’d already made her name as a theater designer, where her conceptual and sculptural stage designs had long impressed London theater world. But in 2003 Devlin turned some of her attention to concert set design, and her work impressed pretty much the entire world. She’s done concert sets for Beyonce and Jay Z, for Lady Gaga and Miley Cyrus, for opera festivals, the Olympics and even for the Super Bowl. She also helped launch the Sphere in Las Vegas with her work with U2. There is currently an exhibition of her work at The Smithsonian’s Cooper Hewitt National Design Museum in New York City, and she joins me on this extra special Design Matters interview. Link to listen is in my bio.
Images that follow, all designed by Es Devlin:
Slide 2: Adele in concert
Slide 3: Beyoncé in concert stage design
Slide 4: The Weeknd in concert stage design
Slide 5: Don Giovanni opera stage design
Slide 6: Jay Z and Ye in concert stage design
Slide 7: Royal Ballet stage design
Slide 8: Salome opera stage design
Slide 9: Carmen opera stage design
Slide 10: U2 concert stage design
Cover image in front of her first solo retrospective at the @cooperhewitt Smithsonian National Design Museum, photographed by Jason Ardizzone-West
In 2003 the artist @esdevlin’s career took a turn. She’d already made her name as a theater designer, where her conceptual and sculptural stage designs had long impressed London theater world. But in 2003 Devlin turned some of her attention to concert set design, and her work impressed pretty much the entire world. She’s done concert sets for Beyonce and Jay Z, for Lady Gaga and Miley Cyrus, for opera festivals, the Olympics and even for the Super Bowl. She also helped launch the Sphere in Las Vegas with her work with U2. There is currently an exhibition of her work at The Smithsonian’s Cooper Hewitt National Design Museum in New York City, and she joins me on this extra special Design Matters interview. Link to listen is in my bio.
Images that follow, all designed by Es Devlin:
Slide 2: Adele in concert
Slide 3: Beyoncé in concert stage design
Slide 4: The Weeknd in concert stage design
Slide 5: Don Giovanni opera stage design
Slide 6: Jay Z and Ye in concert stage design
Slide 7: Royal Ballet stage design
Slide 8: Salome opera stage design
Slide 9: Carmen opera stage design
Slide 10: U2 concert stage design
Cover image in front of her first solo retrospective at the @cooperhewitt Smithsonian National Design Museum, photographed by Jason Ardizzone-West
In 2003 the artist @esdevlin’s career took a turn. She’d already made her name as a theater designer, where her conceptual and sculptural stage designs had long impressed London theater world. But in 2003 Devlin turned some of her attention to concert set design, and her work impressed pretty much the entire world. She’s done concert sets for Beyonce and Jay Z, for Lady Gaga and Miley Cyrus, for opera festivals, the Olympics and even for the Super Bowl. She also helped launch the Sphere in Las Vegas with her work with U2. There is currently an exhibition of her work at The Smithsonian’s Cooper Hewitt National Design Museum in New York City, and she joins me on this extra special Design Matters interview. Link to listen is in my bio.
Images that follow, all designed by Es Devlin:
Slide 2: Adele in concert
Slide 3: Beyoncé in concert stage design
Slide 4: The Weeknd in concert stage design
Slide 5: Don Giovanni opera stage design
Slide 6: Jay Z and Ye in concert stage design
Slide 7: Royal Ballet stage design
Slide 8: Salome opera stage design
Slide 9: Carmen opera stage design
Slide 10: U2 concert stage design
Cover image in front of her first solo retrospective at the @cooperhewitt Smithsonian National Design Museum, photographed by Jason Ardizzone-West
In 2003 the artist @esdevlin’s career took a turn. She’d already made her name as a theater designer, where her conceptual and sculptural stage designs had long impressed London theater world. But in 2003 Devlin turned some of her attention to concert set design, and her work impressed pretty much the entire world. She’s done concert sets for Beyonce and Jay Z, for Lady Gaga and Miley Cyrus, for opera festivals, the Olympics and even for the Super Bowl. She also helped launch the Sphere in Las Vegas with her work with U2. There is currently an exhibition of her work at The Smithsonian’s Cooper Hewitt National Design Museum in New York City, and she joins me on this extra special Design Matters interview. Link to listen is in my bio.
Images that follow, all designed by Es Devlin:
Slide 2: Adele in concert
Slide 3: Beyoncé in concert stage design
Slide 4: The Weeknd in concert stage design
Slide 5: Don Giovanni opera stage design
Slide 6: Jay Z and Ye in concert stage design
Slide 7: Royal Ballet stage design
Slide 8: Salome opera stage design
Slide 9: Carmen opera stage design
Slide 10: U2 concert stage design
Cover image in front of her first solo retrospective at the @cooperhewitt Smithsonian National Design Museum, photographed by Jason Ardizzone-West
In 2003 the artist @esdevlin’s career took a turn. She’d already made her name as a theater designer, where her conceptual and sculptural stage designs had long impressed London theater world. But in 2003 Devlin turned some of her attention to concert set design, and her work impressed pretty much the entire world. She’s done concert sets for Beyonce and Jay Z, for Lady Gaga and Miley Cyrus, for opera festivals, the Olympics and even for the Super Bowl. She also helped launch the Sphere in Las Vegas with her work with U2. There is currently an exhibition of her work at The Smithsonian’s Cooper Hewitt National Design Museum in New York City, and she joins me on this extra special Design Matters interview. Link to listen is in my bio.
Images that follow, all designed by Es Devlin:
Slide 2: Adele in concert
Slide 3: Beyoncé in concert stage design
Slide 4: The Weeknd in concert stage design
Slide 5: Don Giovanni opera stage design
Slide 6: Jay Z and Ye in concert stage design
Slide 7: Royal Ballet stage design
Slide 8: Salome opera stage design
Slide 9: Carmen opera stage design
Slide 10: U2 concert stage design
Cover image in front of her first solo retrospective at the @cooperhewitt Smithsonian National Design Museum, photographed by Jason Ardizzone-West
Tonight, @roxanegay74 and I got to celebrate the 90th birthday of the Queen: the one and only @gloriasteinem. Gloria is one of the most significant writers, thinkers, activists, feminists, humanists and just overall amazing citizens of the 20th and 21st centuries. It was an honor and privilege to share this momentous occasion with her. Happy Birthday Gloria! You have changed the world for us all.
Tonight, @roxanegay74 and I got to celebrate the 90th birthday of the Queen: the one and only @gloriasteinem. Gloria is one of the most significant writers, thinkers, activists, feminists, humanists and just overall amazing citizens of the 20th and 21st centuries. It was an honor and privilege to share this momentous occasion with her. Happy Birthday Gloria! You have changed the world for us all.
Tonight, @roxanegay74 and I got to celebrate the 90th birthday of the Queen: the one and only @gloriasteinem. Gloria is one of the most significant writers, thinkers, activists, feminists, humanists and just overall amazing citizens of the 20th and 21st centuries. It was an honor and privilege to share this momentous occasion with her. Happy Birthday Gloria! You have changed the world for us all.