Rent This Chic Townhouse in Amsterdam
While Eleven Experience is known for establishing luxury rental properties in unconventional, hard-to-reach destinations—a chalet in an ancient farming village on the French-Italian border, a 19th-century lodge in the Colorado Rockies—Canal Huis 58 in Amsterdam marks the company’s first foray into urban residences.
See the Artwork That Cindy Sherman and Ugo Rondinone Hang in Their Own Homes
A new book examines the personal art collections of some of the world’s most prominent contemporary artists.
A Van Gogh Painting Reimagined in a Field Using Plants, Stone, and Earth
Earlier this month, crop artist and painter Stan Herd, completed a 1.2-acre rendition of Vincent van Gogh’s Olive Trees (1889). The project required six months of cultivating watermelons, cantaloupes, squash, and pumpkins, and arranging rocks, mulch, and soil.
This Enchanting Brooklyn Home Could Be Yours
Designed by Thomas Bennett and built in 1900 by Louis Bonert, this Beaux Arts–style limestone manse in the Park Slope Historic District retains all the magnificence of the Gilded Age.
Why Your Bedroom Needs a Four Poster Bed
These 14 four posters from the AD archive are the stuff of dreams.
Get Classic Decorating Ideas from Suzanne Rheinstein
Preview interior designer Suzanne Rheinstein’s new book Room for Living: A Style for Today with Things from the Past.
Neil Patrick Harris and David Burtka's New York Living Room - Get the Look
See how Trace Lehnhoff decorated Neil Patrick Harris and David Burtka’s stylish living room.
Japan's High Design Micro Houses
In Japanese cities, the average house is 1,075 square feet. That makes sense when you consider that the country has a landmass smaller than Montana but a population that puts it at number 11 worldwide. Creativity abounds despite such constraints, notes Naomi Pollack in Jutaku: Japanese Houses (Phaidon, $25), which comes out this October.
The Most Amazing Landscape Architects of Today—and Tomorrow
A new book surveys the best in modern landscape architecture and gives a look at what’s to come.
Paper Takes Center Stage at Los Angeles's Craft and Folk Art Museum
From Indonesian puppetry to Americana silhouetting, the traditional art form of cut paper has been in and out of vogue since the Chinese invented paper during the Han dynasty. But there’s a 21st-century revival afoot among contemporary artists exploring this delicate medium via new technology (laser-cutting), mixed-media interventions (concrete and video), and immersive environments (from paper tents to wallpapered installations). Such innovations form the basis for a cutting-edge exhibition titled “Paperworks,” opening Saturday at the Craft and Folk Art Museum in Los Angeles.