Do You Gotta Be Good at Art to Be a Web Designer

  • Where Have All the Lesbians Gone? review: thoughtful, moving and a crucial history lesson

    This Channel four programme is an interesting and important give-and-take of rights, pride and identity

    (L-R): Maya, Niamh, Yvonne and Rosie in Where Have All the Lesbians Gone?
  • Julia Bradbury's unflinching account of the cruel realities of cancer

    Julia Bradbury: Breast Cancer and Me chronicled her painful personal journey so that others tin can benefit

  • Downton Abbey's Allen Leech: 'Maggie Smith loves cat memes'

    The Irish actor, who plays Tom Branson, shares some backside-the-scenes secrets

  • The twenty-four hours my tap-dancing dream came true

    Our author plucked upward the courage to dust off her tap shoes and join the bandage of the brilliant 'Anything Goes'

  • The sinister story behind the Nazis' 'Baedeker blitz'

    The Luftwaffe's raids of 1942 targeted Britain's poorly protected tourist traps – selected with the help of a popular German language travel guide

Comment and assay

  • How Hollywood fell out of dear with the cowboy

    Westerns used to be a crucial part of every film studio's roster, just the strong, silent gunslinger is now persona non grata

    John Wayne and Den Martin in The Sons of Katie Elder, 1965
  • GB News should beware – TalkTV is another shark in the same swimming

    Two channels are chasing the same viewers – so is Nigel Farage's operation in trouble? The probable outcome is far from that simple

    High-profile: Donald Trump is interviewed by Piers Morgan for TalkTV
  • How Alan Dein is connecting strangers to make the most electrifying radio

    A new series of Alan Dein's Don't Log Off explores the things that enliven and inspire people all around the earth

    Alan Dein, presenter of the Radio 4's Don't Log Off
  • How Orwell'southward stab at socialist propaganda concluded up as an assault on 'the stupid cult of Russia'

    First published in 1937, The Road to Wigan Pier is a masterpiece – so why did many leftists hate it?

    Novelist and journalist George Orwell

Reviews

  • Casablanca Beats: this teen drama dances to an all-too-familiar melody

    Morocco is the setting, hip hop the art class, but otherwise at that place's little here that yous won't have seen before in standard Hollywood fare

    Casablanca Beats
  • We're All Going to the World's Fair: indie horror that promises more freakiness than it delivers

    This tale of a teenager who makes a maybe sinister online connection is wilfully oblique. simply its star Anna Cobb is clearly 1 to watch

    Anna Cobb in We're All Going to the World's Fair
  • This is what life with agoraphobia is really like

    In his new book On Agoraphobia, Graham Caveney gives a horrifying – but frequently cute – account of a life shaped by fear of going outdoors

    Book review Graham Caveney On Agoraphobia
  • From cabbage at 2am to fending off bats – what it was really like to piece of work at Bletchley Park

    This evidence on the actual site of the vital Second Earth State of war cipher-decoding centre delivers fascinating insights into day-to-day life there

    The Intelligence Factory, Bletchley Park
  • Mother Earth and fairy queens: the heathen goddesses Christianity has failed to stamp out

    With Britain on the brink of a heathen revival, read Ronald Hutton'southward new book Queens of the Wild to learn what information technology's all near

    Coming full (fairy) circle: detail from a 1786 William Blake painting
  • Portable Magic by Emma Smith review: a brilliant history of how books can practice impairment as well as good

    Nosotros have a 'rosy nostalgia' about books and their civilising power, only they can be wielded barbarically, also

    Gateway: books are our portal to anywhere and anything

Backside the music

Rock's untold stories, from band-splitting feuds to the greatest performances of all time

Tonight's Boob tube

  • What'due south on TV this evening: Ten Percentage, Julia Bradbury: Breast Cancer and Me, and more

    Your complete guide to the calendar week's tv, films and sport, across terrestrial and digital platforms

Screen Secrets

A regular serial telling the stories behind moving-picture show and TV's greatest hits – and near fascinating flops

  • Julia Donaldson: How I fear lockdown may have damaged our children

    The bestselling writer explains why she worries that coronavirus restrictions has deprived a generation of vital experiences

    Julia Donaldson, author of The Gruffalo and Room on the Broom, worries that children were deprived of 'normal' experiences
  • The sinister story behind the Nazis' 'Baedeker blitz'

    The Luftwaffe's raids of 1942 targeted Britain'southward poorly protected tourist traps – selected with the help of a pop German travel guide

    A view of Exeter Cathedral after a night of air raids and dive bombing
  • This is what life with agoraphobia is actually like

    In his new volume On Agoraphobia, Graham Caveney gives a horrifying – but oftentimes cute – account of a life shaped by fear of going outdoors

    Book review Graham Caveney On Agoraphobia
  • Mother World and fairy queens: the heathen goddesses Christianity has failed to stamp out

    With Britain on the brink of a pagan revival, read Ronald Hutton's new book Queens of the Wild to acquire what it'due south all nearly

    Coming full (fairy) circle: detail from a 1786 William Blake painting
  • From cabbage at 2am to fending off bats – what it was really like to piece of work at Bletchley Park

    This bear witness on the actual site of the vital Second World State of war zippo-decoding centre delivers fascinating insights into twenty-four hour period-to-day life at that place

    The Intelligence Factory, Bletchley Park
  • Why the 1990s were the last golden historic period of culture

    Ahead of a BBC season, our critics prove that the happiest decade made the best fine art

    Cool Britannia: (from left) Jarvis Cocker of Pulp, Tracey Emin, David Baddiel and Rob Newman
  • The Tate'due south Walter Sickert show is a foggy panorama of Victorian dirt and vice

    Tate Britain'southward exhibition is saturated with too many similar paintings and misses an opportunity to explore Sickert's acting

    The Camden Town Murder (c1908) by Walter Sickert
  • In from the cold: indigenous Sámi artists debut at the Venice Biennale

    The native people of the Arctic Circumvolve are highlighting their controversial past from this weekend

    Sami artists debut Venice Biennale

In depth

More stories

  • Where Have All the Lesbians Gone? review: thoughtful, moving and a crucial history lesson

    This Channel 4 programme is an interesting and important word of rights, pride and identity

    (L-R): Maya, Niamh, Yvonne and Rosie in Where Have All the Lesbians Gone?
  • Julia Bradbury's unflinching account of the savage realities of cancer

    Julia Bradbury: Chest Cancer and Me chronicled her painful personal journeying so that others tin can do good

    Powerful: Julia Bradbury
  • Downton Abbey'south Allen Leech: 'Maggie Smith loves cat memes'

    The Irish role player, who plays Tom Branson, shares some behind-the-scenes secrets

    High society: Allen Leech
  • The day my tap-dancing dream came truthful

    Our writer plucked up the courage to dust off her tap shoes and join the cast of the bright 'Annihilation Goes'

    video: The day my tap-dancing dream came true
  • The sinister story behind the Nazis' 'Baedeker blitz'

    The Luftwaffe's raids of 1942 targeted Britain'southward poorly protected tourist traps – selected with the help of a pop German travel guide

    A view of Exeter Cathedral after a night of air raids and dive bombing
  • This is what life with agoraphobia is actually like

    In his new volume On Agoraphobia, Graham Caveney gives a horrifying – just often beautiful – business relationship of a life shaped by fearfulness of going outdoors

    Book review Graham Caveney On Agoraphobia
  • From cabbage at 2am to fending off bats – what it was really like to work at Bletchley Park

    This testify on the bodily site of the vital Second World State of war cipher-decoding heart delivers fascinating insights into twenty-four hours-to-day life at that place

    The Intelligence Factory, Bletchley Park
  • Guns and roses: the tearing, romantic delights of Grosse Pointe Blank

    Gen X angst and John Woo-style gunplay combined to killer effect in John Cusack's subversive comedy. But would information technology become made today?

    John Cusack in Grosse Pointe Blank

cahillfuraggion.blogspot.com

Source: https://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/

0 Response to "Do You Gotta Be Good at Art to Be a Web Designer"

Post a Comment

Iklan Atas Artikel

Iklan Tengah Artikel 1

Iklan Tengah Artikel 2

Iklan Bawah Artikel