Greetings from JuergenGreetings from Juergen

Happy 250th, America. I mean that. I was sworn in as an American citizen in a Brooklyn courthouse in 1991 — during the John Gotti trial, of all things — having arrived from Germany in 1977 and spent fourteen years becoming, undeniably, an American. I feel like my patriotism has been earned over 35 years, not inherited. And earned patriotism, I've found, is entirely compatible with looking elsewhere, for inspiration, for juxtaposition. So that's what this issue does. While the fireworks go up and the hot dogs go down, I went looking at what the rest of the world has been making. The short version: quite a lot.

There is no American story in here. Not today. Instead there's a theatre in Brisbane wearing its glass like moving water, made possible by Chinese manufacturing and a Norwegian-Australian design partnership. There's Björk in Reykjavík, shown not as a singer with hobbies but as an artist whose songs leak into painting and video and refuse to stay in their lane. There's a Norwegian artist who built her own crystal radio to turn the Northern Lights into sound, and a New Zealand photographer lighting extinct birds so tenderly they seem to breathe. Even the one piece pointed squarely at American politics — Jenny Holzer's show — is hanging in Porto, made by an American working abroad and seen through foreign walls.

The thread is simple. The world is large, the work is good, and 250 years is a long time for everyone else to have been at it too. This week, no fireworks. Just things people elsewhere have quietly been building while we weren't watching. Pour yourself something cold and come look.

The Intersect: Art In Tech  

Technology in Music


Photography

Architecture

Art and Politics

The Last WordThe Last Word

Thanks for taking the day off from the fireworks to look elsewhere with me. I had more fun assembling this issue than I expected — turns out the world is generous when you bother to look past your own backyard. I'm curious where your eye went this week. Was it the rippling glass in Brisbane, the Northern Lights turned to static, or something I undersold? Hit reply and tell me what you'd add to a global roundup. My list of countries I haven't covered is embarrassingly long.

Best, Juergen

The Intersect: Art In Tech