en attendant l'art
by Designboom - about 54 minutes
Retrospective on Aleksa Milojević’s The Nomad’s Automobile
 
Aleksa Milojević’s The Nomad’s Automobile was presented in the Future gallery of Motion. Autos, Art, Architecture at the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao, curated by Norman Foster. The 2022 exhibition examined the automobile through artistic and cultural perspectives, with one gallery dedicated to speculative proposals addressing the future of mobility. Milojević’s project contributed to this framework by exploring independent movement in response to resource scarcity, urban congestion, and shifting living patterns.
 
Set in the year 2086, The Nomad’s Automobile proposes a mobility system designed for existence beyond conventional urban...
by Parterre - about 55 minutes
Diana Soviero chats with Roger Pines about six decades of performing, four decades of teaching, and how she’s handing the tradition off to the next generation.
by Parterre - about 56 minutes
Die Entführung aus dem Serail boldly goes where no opera has gone before at Pacific Opera Project. 
by Parterre - about 56 minutes
Despite some complications, the Deutsche Oper exhumes buried treasure in Franz Schreker’s Der Schatzgräber. 
by ArtNews - about 56 minutes
For a brief moment ahead of the Venice Biennale this May, all eyes will be on Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, where the Carnegie Museum of Art is staging its 2026 edition of the Carnegie International. For its biggest edition to date, the exhibition has tapped an array of 61 artists based in nations ranging from the Philippines to Peru, many of whom will premiere new work when the show opens on May 2. Founded in 1896, the Carnegie International is the oldest biennial-style show in the US; it is now staged once every four years. While the Carnegie International may lack the name recognition of the Whitney Biennial, which this year takes place concurrently in New York, this prestigious exhibition has been valuable in...
by The Art Newspaper - about 2 hours
The auction will provide crucial financial support for the institution, which last year was looking at axing 60 members of staff as part of a cost-cutting drive
by The Art Newspaper - about 2 hours
The choreographer and performance artist is best known for her radical theatre performances
by ArtNews - about 2 hours
When Thaddaeus Ropac announced this week that he would begin representing Florentina Holzinger, it landed as more than a standard roster update. Holzinger has spent the past decade building a reputation as one of Europe’s most uncompromising performance artists. She has filled opera houses and theaters with motorbikes, helicopters, heavy machinery, nudity, and feats of endurance that test what a body can withstand. What she has not had, until now, is gallery representation. That changes just as she prepares to represent Austria at the 61st Venice Biennale later this year. For Holzinger, who trained in choreography and moved quickly into large-scale theatrical productions, the shift into a commercial gallery...
by ArtNews - about 2 hours
To receive Morning Links in your inbox every weekday, sign up for our Breakfast with ARTnews newsletter.The HeadlinesBAILEY’S BEQUEST. The Intuit Art Museum (IAM) in Chicago, one of the country’s top museums dedicated to self-taught artists, has been gifted 61 works through two donations, reports The Art Newspaper. The largest of the two, numbering 47 pieces, comes from the estate of late Chicago collector and founding supporter of the museum, Jan Petry (1939-2024). The second comes from the Los Angeles-based scholar and African American art collector Gordon W. Bailey. The gifts will help the museum’s goal to exhibit more works by women artists of color, and “bring new artists’ stories into...
by ArtNews - about 2 hours
A hidden camera was recently discovered in the women’s bathroom at the Centre Pompidou’s administrative headquarters in Paris. The device was found in mid-January by one of the museum’s employees, AFP reported on Wednesday.The Centre Pompidou’s offices are located inside its main building at Place Georges-Pompidou. The museum is currently closed for renovations, but its offices remain open. After the discovery, the museum filed a legal complaint and suspended a staff member accused of installing the camera.In a message sent to staff on Tuesday, reviewed by AFP, the museum explained that the camera was found on January 14. The person believed to be responsible was identified and immediately suspended as...
by The Art Newspaper - about 3 hours
The archaeological museum in northeast Syria—which was out of sight of many local residents until late 2024—is opening 24 years after construction on it began
by Designboom - about 3 hours
tbilisi shop frames organic merchandise with industrial style  
 
BARR x Cutburo Café and Flower Shop is a monochromatic retail and cafe space in Tbilisi, Georgia. The design objective was to unify two distinct sensory experiences – the social ritual of a café and the delicate, organic nature of a flower shop – under a singular, futuristic aesthetic. The project operates on the principle of ‘industrial coldness,’ using a sharp, silver-toned palette to frame and elevate the natural life contained within. The material selection is central to the project’s spatial identity. Stainless steel serves as the primary medium, chosen for its reflective properties and its ability to create a dialogue...
by Hyperallergic - about 4 hours
The world is in desperate need of sensitive, caring art teachers who are as eager to learn as they are to instruct, and Mónica Palma is a shimmering example of just such a teacher. The Mexican-born, Brooklyn-based artist and educator reflects today on the lessons she learned from teaching art to young children.As some of the hundreds of children at ICE's horrific Dilley detention center in Texas share testimonies this week, I can't stop thinking about one clay workshop she organized for children who had recently migrated from Colombia, Venezuela, and Ecuador. They immediately associated the clay with the dangerous crossing through the jungle to reach the United States. As an educator, Palma followed...
by Parterre - about 4 hours
The Solti recording of Bohème is completely miscast.
by Designboom - about 4 hours
Seoul wing provides temporary shelter in parks
 
Seoul Wing by BKID is a series of installative sunshades for parks that can withstand typhoons and harsh weather. Formed with a sloping roof, the bird-wing-shaped structures are made from polyurethane mesh, giving them a lightweight and robust design. Seoul’s summers are humid, and at times, the country experiences sudden storms and seasonal typhoons. Traditional parasols and tents break under strong winds, so BKID reframes these through the lens of biomimicry because in nature, wings can withstand air by being flexible and distributing force.
all images courtesy of BKID | photos by BKID and Lee Sangpil
 
 
Light Installative sunshades made from mesh
 
The...
by ArtNews - about 4 hours
A historic Manhattan home that’s long been a window into 19th-century New York life has revealed an unexpected secret. It turns out the Merchant’s House Museum, a preserved landmark in the NoHo neighborhood, appears to have once served as a refuge for people escaping slavery.The discovery came during an inspection of a built-in dresser in a second-floor hallway. When archaeologists examined the area beneath its drawers, they found a small rectangular opening cut into the floorboards. The opening led to a concealed space, roughly 2 feet by 2 feet, complete with a ladder down to the ground floor.Experts said the secret passage suggests the house may have functioned as a “safe house” on the Underground...
by Designboom - about 4 hours
PnP Furniture (Plank and Point) introduces Cabinet Collection
 
PnP Furniture (Plank and Point) introduces the Cabinet Collection, a series of storage pieces constructed through a modular system of planks and exposed screw connections. The series draws on the logic of wooden fences, where evenly spaced vertical boards create rhythm, order, and enclosure through simple modular components.
 
The arrangement of regularly dimensioned planks establishes a consistent visual cadence. This ordered framework provides a structured setting for the objects stored within, addressing the need for coordination as personal belongings accumulate over time. Rather than concealing storage, the system defines it through visible...
by Designboom - about 5 hours
incised staff house by bergmeisterwolf anchors italian valley
 
Bergmeisterwolf inserts Incised, a project that accommodates employees of the nearby hotel, into a narrow Alpine valley shaped by the highway, train tracks, state road, and nearby river in Franzensfeste, Italy. The concrete volume aligns itself parallel to the road, forming a sloping edge that establishes presence within what is described as ‘a place without a place.’
 
The site is shaped by constant movement and tight spatial limits. The team responds with an elongated concrete body that traces the line of the state road, its pitched roof carving a distinct silhouette against the steep terrain. Diamond-shaped windows puncture the monolithic...
by Art Africa - about 6 hours
The inaugural edition, opening in November 2026, positions Doha as a transnational cultural hub through multi-site exhibitions examining water, ecology and global exchange LEFT TO RIGHT: Ruba Katrib, Mark Rappolt, Tom Eccles, and Shabbir Hussain […]
by Aesthetic - about 6 hours
Yorgos Lanthimos needs no introduction. From the unsettling minimalism of Dogtooth to the baroque intensity of The Favourite, his films have repeatedly reshaped contemporary cinema. Celebrated for a singular vision that balances absurdist humour with acute human insight, Lanthimos has become synonymous with uncompromising originality. Five-time Academy Award nominations, a Golden Globe, a BAFTA, the Jury Prize at Cannes and the Golden Lion at Venice attest to the scale and reach of his imagination. Each work exists as a world, meticulously constructed and unnervingly precise, drawing audiences into spaces that are intimate yet disorienting. This same careful orchestration informs his latest venture: a major...
by Art Africa - about 6 hours
A two-venue exhibition in San Francisco traces Black lineage, movement and collective remembrance through installation, film and printmaking. Trina Michelle Robinson, A still from Transposing Landscapes – A Requiem for Charles Young, 2025. Courtesy of […]
by Art Africa - about 7 hours
A travelling exhibition, presented in collaboration with Kunsthaus Bregenz, brings drawing, lithography, and sculpture into conversation in Nairobi. LEFT TO RIGHT: Michael Armitage, Vision II (detail), 2022. Lithograph on paper, 70 x 59cm. Maria Lassnig, […]
by Shutterhub - about 7 hours
 
What does love look like? Sometimes it comes with lust and desire, sometimes with deep-rooted care from the heart, and other times it’s a disguise for something that isn’t love at all.
Love can be found in the quieter gestures of everyday life. It can look like kindness, the people and places you hold dear, moments of care and support, or the small comforts that bring you peace: a cup of tea, a single flower, a familiar corner of home.
DO YOU LIKE LOVE? is a metaphor for the things that bring us joy and comfort, and for what we offer others to help them feel the same. Within the pages of DO YOU LIKE LOVE?, photographers answer the question – do you like love?
© Chloe Sastry
The photographers selected...
by Art Africa - about 7 hours
The city’s first Pan-African contemporary art gallery launches at Minnesota Street Project, presenting artists from across the continent and its diasporas. Vusi Beauchamp, Tempest, 2022. Mixed Medium on Canvas, 200 x 300cm. Courtesy of the […]
by Juliet - about 10 hours
C’è stata anche la dolorosa questione iraniana nell’appena conclusa 49esima edizione di Arte Fiera a Bologna, anno domini 2026 (la prima firmata dal nuovo direttore Davide Ferri). Il rinnovato padiglione esterno Esprit Nouveau, esatta riproduzione di quello parigino firmato da Le Corbusier, ha ospitato infatti una (molto) concettuale e potente installazione/performance dell’artista franco-iraniana Chalisée Naamani. Chalisée Naamani,”Wardrobe”, Padiglione de l’Esprit Nouveau, Bologna, 2026. Un progetto di Arte Fiera in collaborazione con Fondazione Furla,  ph credits Team99, courtesy l’artista e Ciaccia Levi (Parigi-Milano)
Proposta dalla Fondazione Furla, “Wardrobe” è un’installazione...
by Aesthetic - about 10 hours
The best design shows reveal how creativity, science, innovation and technology intersect – influencing the very world around us. Those working in the space blend traditional art with bold new methods, creating something striking and unexpected. These five international exhibitions shine a spotlight on the pioneers pushing the discipline forward, inviting audiences behind the scenes of their practice. Together, they trace the complex and fascinating evolution of design, unpack the methods and thinking behind the work, and explore how these ideas resonate within contemporary culture and everyday life. Hella Jongerius: Whispering Things  Vitra Design Museum, Weil am Rhein | Opens 14 March  Hella Jongerius is...
by Hyperallergic - yesterday at 23:09
The traveling exhibition Amy Sherald: American Sublime has set a new attendance record at the Baltimore Museum of Art (BMA) since it opened last November, the institution said this week.According to a BMA spokesperson reached by Hyperallergic, attendance stood at 63,000 as of Monday, February 9, and is expected to peak at 75,000 by the time the show closes on April 5. That makes Sherald's mid-career survey the museum's most-attended show since 2000 — a remarkable feat considering that the BMA was not an original destination on American Sublime's itinerary. Consisting of nearly 50 quietly contemplative grisaille portraits of Black Americans, Sherald's show debuted at the San Francisco...
by ArtForum - yesterday at 23:08
February 11, 2026, New York, NY — Today, Artforum announces a restructure to its editorial leadership. Tina Rivers Ryan, who has served as Editor in Chief for the past two years, will depart her role at the end of February. Two current staffers, Executive Editor Rachel Wetzler and Editor Daniel Wenger, will now lead the publication’s editorial initiatives […]
by The Art Newspaper - yesterday at 22:58
Mexican president Claudia Sheinbaum has called it ”the most important archaeological finding of the last decade”
by Hyperallergic - yesterday at 22:29
At the end of November of 2011, I saw my dad take his last breath. I came back to the United States after participating in all the death-related rituals that helped organize my pain in México. New York City was not a place to live my mourning, and right around December of the same year, I felt an intense longing to become small again. I needed to work with children. Another time, around 1990, I’d had a similar urge after finishing my own cancer treatment. I was seeking life.I felt dizzy and disorganized working those first jobs with children. I went to art school and did not have an official training in childhood education, so I learned on the go. The children didn’t respond to logic, or at least not the...
by Hyperallergic - yesterday at 22:11
Photographer Jerry McMillan, who played a key role in documenting the mid-century art scene in Los Angeles, died on Monday, February 9, at the age of 89. The cause was “old age and a broken heart,” according to his son. McMillan’s wife of more than six decades, Patricia Ella McMillan, had passed away a week earlier.Born on December 7, 1936, McMillan grew up in Oklahoma City, where he was childhood friends with Ed Ruscha and Joe Goode. In 1957, he drove to Los Angeles to attend the Chouinard Art Institute (now the California Institute of the Arts), joining Ruscha, Goode, and fellow Okie transplants Patrick Blackwell and Mason Williams. The group lived together in Hollywood, then Los Feliz, and dubbed...
by Hyperallergic - yesterday at 22:00
Should I allow my work to be sold to people whose politics I hate? I’m not okay with the ongoing injustice in Minneapolis and I don’t want to pretend this is just a difference of opinion. —distraught painter in AmericaShort answer. No. You should not allow your work to be sold to MAGA supporters. The entire administration is corrupt and supporting it is a choice. You don't owe them your work.Whether you can exercise that right, though, depends on your financial situation, your relationship with your gallery, and how much leverage you have. For some artists, decision-making will be straightforward. For others, it comes at a high cost. You decide whether you can incur that cost. But individual...
by Thisiscolossal - yesterday at 21:58
When we think of terms like “flowing” or “fluid,” we could be referring to the nature of water, but we can also just as easily apply these concepts to our understanding of art and craft. Fabrics “pool” and different mediums converge. The nature of creativity is often referred to in terms of an “ebb and flow.” Ecologically speaking, bodies of water are metaphorically woven into the fabric of our planet. Rivers and lakes sustain an abundance of life, shape cultures, and course through history. Amid the ongoing climate crisis, how do artists express concerns about water and the environment? Water | Craft, a group exhibition at the Minnesota Marine Art Museum, dives into this question. The museum...
by archaeology - yesterday at 20:00
1927 photograph of drill (left); recent photographs of artifact (right) BADARI, EGYPT—According to a statement released by Newcastle University, archaeologists have identified the earliest known metal drill from Egypt, a 2.5-inch-long copper-alloy tool used some 5,300 years ago, long before ancient Egyptians were thought to have used such technology. Egyptologists originally thought that the artifact, which was excavated at the site of Badari in the 1920s, was an awl or a simple punching tool. But recent microscopic examination of the artifact revealed telltale marks suggesting it was manipulated by a bow to pierce wood or stone in a rotary motion. “This re-analysis has provided strong evidence that this...
by hifructose - yesterday at 19:59
A bad Facebook experience turned Brown off to social media, but he ultimately brought David Henry Nobody Jr. to Instagram... Read the full article by clicking above!
The post David Henry Nobody JR Exposes Himself first appeared on Hi-Fructose Magazine.
by Thisiscolossal - yesterday at 19:42
Although James Reka finds total freedom in his studio practice, it’s public art that he gravitates toward. The Australia-born artist researches the history of a building or neighborhood as he conceptualizes a mural and enjoys the constraints of creating within a particular geographic and cultural context. “Public art needs to connect with the local community,” he says. “It does need to have a narrative or a message, even if it’s very subtle. I am mindful of this and choose to view it as a challenge to explore certain themes and color combinations that my studio work does not.” Rheine, Germany Reka renders minimalist shapes into dense compositions with a distinctive sense of vitality and movement....
by archaeology - yesterday at 19:30
Fragment of an inscribed votive stone REGENSBURG, GERMANY—La Brújula Verde reports that archaeologists discovered a temple to the god Mithras in Bavaria during 2023 excavations prior to construction of apartment buildings in the old town of Regensburg. Little of the building is preserved since it was constructed of wood. Artifacts recovered within the structure, including an inscribed votive stone and fragments of metal votive plaques, point to its ritual use. Incense burners and fragments of a ceramic vessel decorated with snake motifs—imagery specifically connected to worship of Mithras—allowed researchers to identify the site as a sanctuary dedicated to the god. Moreover, handled drinking jugs found...
by The Art Newspaper - yesterday at 19:21
The gifted works come from the estate of longtime supporter Jan Petry and the collection of Los Angeles-based scholar Gordon W. Bailey
by archaeology - yesterday at 19:00
GARNEILL, MONTANA—For around 700 years, Native people of the American Great Plains hunted bison at a site in central Montana that archaeologists call Bergstrom. Then, around 1,100 years ago, humans abandoned the site even though bison remained abundant in the area, according to a statement released by Frontiers. “The Bergstrom site presented a puzzle,” paleoecologist John Wendt of New Mexico State University said. “Why would hunters stop using a site that had worked for so long?” In 2019, Wendt’s team began digging and investigating three-foot-by-three-foot excavation pits to try to better understand the Bergstrom site’s use and eventual disuse. Researchers collected animal bone and pollen...
by Thisiscolossal - yesterday at 18:23
Redolent of African basketry, hairstyles, headwear, and pottery, Donté K. Hayes’ abstract ceramic sculptures may be interpreted as poetic vessels, even though they lack traditional openings. While we easily associate clay pots and round woven forms with ideas related to storage, protection, and even spiritual significance, they also nod to the human head as a holder—a kind of receptacle for culture, language, personal expression, and dreams. For the past several years, Hayes has approached porcelain with an emphasis on mostly monochrome black forms with meticulously hand-marked surfaces with textures that appear almost strand-like. Recently, he’s begun incorporating colored porcelain into the bulbous...
by Parterre - wednesday at 15:00
Iván Fischer's Mahler 3 with the Budapest Festival Orchestra at Carnegie Hall is memorable but crude, sometimes exhilarating and often tedious.
by booooooom - wednesday at 15:00
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Rochelle Marie Adam’s Website
Rochelle Marie Adam on Instagram
by Aesthetic - wednesday at 14:00
Yemeni-Egyptian-American artist Yumna Al-Arashi (b. 1988) creates work with a singular purpose: to oppose the oppression and stereotyping of women worldwide. The artist uses a range of media – photography, book, sculpture – to explore how the Arab world is depicted, question the legacy of colonialism in our thoughts and contemplate matriarchal traditions that are all but lost. Huis Marseille presents Al-Arashi’s first solo museum exhibition, titled Body as Resistance, which brings together her entire oeuvre. Featured works include dyptich Axis of Evil (2020), which depicts four women from the countries designed “rogue states” by the US government and Shedding Skin (2017), made in a bathhouse in...
by Aesthetic - wednesday at 12:00
The very first Biennale was founded in 1895 in Venice, as an international exhibition designed to bring artists from across Europe together in the Giardini gardens, fostering exchange and dialogue between nations. Originally established as a celebration of artistic innovation, it created a precedent for large-scale exhibitions that could combine national pride with cross-cultural engagement. Over time, the Biennale expanded its remit beyond painting and sculpture to include architecture, film, performance and multimedia works. It is a festival of ideas, a convergence of memory, place and political reflection, where art ceases to exist in isolation and becomes a catalyst for social engagement. Biennales have...
by Art Africa - wednesday at 10:00
The first major museum retrospective of the American artist surveys a practice spanning painting, poetry, performance and suspended acrylic structures at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. Suzanne Jackson, Grandparents, 1970. Acrylic wash, gesso, […]
by Juliet - wednesday at 6:04
In un mondo dell’arte che, nell’attuale frangente di deriva imperialista, autoritaria e bellicista, è apparso finora troppo silente e timido, la Fondazione Merz di Torino ha scelto di schierarsi. Diverse mostre e iniziative che vi hanno avuto luogo di recente, a partire dalla mostra dell’artista palestinese Khalil Rabah nel 2023, si sono collocate senza timore nel discorso politico, attraverso un fare cultura che è anche informare e creare comunità. Prendendo spunto da una considerazione tratta da uno scritto di Mario Merz, “la cultura si sveste e fa apparire la guerra”, la mostra collettiva Push the Limits 2 si pone in continuità con questi intenti e costituisce il secondo capitolo di una...
by Thisiscolossal - wednesday at 1:33
Jason Mitcham’s childhood home in Greensboro, North Carolina, is no longer standing. In 2011, the local government seized the house and the land he grew up on via eminent domain to widen what was then High Point Road into what’s now Gate City Boulevard. Mitcham last saw the site in 2023, when a paved highway blanketed where the neighborhood once stood, and fragments of garages and barns still marked the landscape. To memorialize this beloved landmark, Mitcham hand-painted “Ever Behind the Sunset,” a touching stop-motion film that combines a series of expressive compositions with audio from the artist’s mother and his own home videos taken throughout the 1980s. Panels of thick, gestural brushstrokes...
by ArtForum - tuesday at 23:22
The organizers of Frieze New York have revealed the sixty-six galleries that will be participating in the event’s fourteenth iteration, slated to take place May 3–17 at the Shed, which has hosted it since 2021. The exhibitors represent twenty-six countries and include stalwarts such as Gagosian, Hauser & Wirth, Pace Gallery, Perrotin, Thaddaeus Ropac, White Cube and David Zwirner. Among […]
by Thisiscolossal - tuesday at 20:51
The expression “wherever you go, there you are” is often wielded to describe futile attempts to escape hangups, anxieties, and a variety of unwanted emotions. Although this truism is typically offered as a negative, it can also be read as a positive that provides comfort and stability amid new environments. In I Bring Home with Me, Ghanaian artist Amoako Boafo recreates his Accra studio in an architectural reproduction within Roberts Projects’ Los Angeles gallery. Boafo is known for his stylized portraiture of Black people, whose skin the artist renders in swirling gestures made with his fingers. This exhibition presents a collection of paintings embedded within the life-sized replica, created in...
by archaeology - tuesday at 20:00
T-shaped antler axe with broken and polished edge EILSLEBEN, GERMANY—Live Science reports that excavations at an ancient farming village near Eilsleben in northern Germany have uncovered intriguing new evidence about interactions between the region’s preexisting hunter-gatherers and Europe’s earliest farmers. Archaeologists believe the site served as a kind of frontier outpost for the first wave of Neolithic agriculturists who migrated to central Europe from Anatolia and established the site around 5375 b.c. Recent fieldwork has uncovered houses, burials, pits, and cultural material belonging to the so-called Neolithic Linear Pottery culture, or LBK. However, archaeologists were also surprised by the...
by archaeology - tuesday at 19:30
Aerial photo showing the walls of Alexandria on the Tigris, Charax-Spasinou, Iraq JEBEL KHAYYABER, IRAQ—Ancient written sources record that when Alexander the Great returned to Mesopotamia from the Indus Valley around 324 b.c., he founded a strategic new port in the region, known as Alexandria on the Tigris. Until recent years, however, its exact location remained lost to archaeologists. According to a report by La Brújula Verde, new research has not only helped rediscover the site, but has provided new details about its extensive size and layout. An international team of scholars led by University of Konstanz archaeologist Stefan Hauser relied on aerial photography, drone imagery, and surface surveys to...
by ArtForum - tuesday at 19:29
The Minneapolis-based designer discusses his viral anti-ICE protest signs
by ArtForum - tuesday at 17:19
MoMA PS1 has named the fifty-three artists and collectives whose work will be featured in this year’s iteration of the Queens-based institution’s quinquennial Greater New York survey, set to open April 10 and run through August 17. For the first time since 2010, it will coincide with the Whitney Biennial; it will be followed by the New Museum Triennial, […]
by ArtForum - tuesday at 17:17
The Hepworth Wakefield in West Yorkshire, England, has named Olivia Colling as its new executive director and Laura Smith as its artistic director. Both are natives of Yorkshire and are being promoted from within the institution. The announcement comes as the gallery, named for renowned British sculptor Barbara Hepworth, prepares to celebrate its fifteenth anniversary. […]