This Webcomic Made It Okay to Be Sad Online. Then Its Artist Vanished.
Finding the author of Pictures for Sad Children.
Finding the author of Pictures for Sad Children.
Justin Ling Input Nov 2021 30min Permalink
A profile of photographer William Christenberry.
Michael Adno The Bitter Southerner Feb 2019 35min Permalink
She has convinced her followers she is a pretty-in-pink naïf, an escort, an unhinged ex, an office drone, and, most recently, an expectant mother. None of it is real.
Molly Langmuir Elle Oct 2016 15min Permalink
A woman discovers artistic integrity during an ill-fated relationship.
"Melanie finally knew their relationship wasn’t going anywhere while in the contemporary art hall of the museum. Andy stopped every few feet and brought his hand to his mouth. She couldn’t look at him for more than a few seconds without getting irritated. It was like a performance piece. He exhaled through his fingers, rubbed his chin, and circled a pile of Styrofoam chunks. He circled counterclockwise."
James Yates is a contributing editor to Longform.org.
James Yates Pithead Chapel Jul 2014 Permalink
On working in an artists’ colony.
Alexander Chee The Morning News Aug 2012 15min Permalink
Creating an identity that’s no longer tied to the past.
Monsters occasionally assume a completely unexpected appearance. All of a sudden, Adolf Hitler is standing onstage wearing an Adidas tracksuit and flip-flops, and his name isn't Hitler; it's Oliver Polak. And the monster isn't really Adolf Hitler, either; it's the audience's laughter. It starts with a sputter, like something trying to break free from its restraints. But then it bursts out as if suddenly liberated.
Georg Diez Der Spiegel Nov 2011 20min Permalink
A look at the artists and writers who drive for a New York cab company. The story that inspired Taxi.
Mark Jacobson New York Sep 1975 15min Permalink