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Art May 13, 2026

Photographer Recreates Lost Love Through Artistic Reenactments in 'Replaced' Project

Photographer Diana Markosian spent three months recreating intimate moments from her past relations…
The Artist's Journey Through Love and LossFalling in and then out of love is a universal experience that often brings sadness, grief and heartbreak, and with time, hope and healing. Photographer Diana Markosian used her camera lens to document these complex feelings in her new project, Replaced.She brings the viewer on her journey of having, losing and reclaiming love, in a project that blurs documentary and fiction. "[The moments] no longer existed in the way they had, and I wanted to reclaim them," she says. "I wanted to feel that I could exist in my own story again."Recreating Intimate Moments Through ArtTo document their relationship, Markosian and her team worked with an actor to play her ex-partner. Each intimate image from the series, taken over three months, is a replica of an exact moment once shared with her ex and now shared between her and the actor. Her connection to him deliberately led to his being cast as her partner in the series so that the experience would feel as real as possible.With the actor, she visited Miami, Paris, Naples, Capri and Nice, all places she had once traveled to with her ex-partner. "These locations carry an existing weight of romantic myth," she says. "They are already shaped by cultural narratives of love, desire and idealized experience."The Emotional Toll of ReenactmentShe stayed at the same hotels and did the activities they had once done together, describing the experience as painful but cathartic. "It hurts so much, watching myself be replaced, watching those memories erased, and I didn't want to live in this any more," she says. "I'm so grateful that the project happened quickly."One of the most tender moments she recreates with the model appears in an image of them seated in a bathtub, holding one another with a red light glowing around them. Their vulnerability allows the viewer to reflect on a delicate moment between two people whose past love no longer exists, fostering empathy and prompting the audience to reflect on their own past relationships.Art as a Tool for Processing EmotionsCreating these intimate photographs enabled her to contemplate her journey. "I wanted to acknowledge how these same spaces can be reoccupied," she says, before adding: "If anything, [the project] just showed me how much I loved this person."For the past 16 years, Markosian has not let go of her camera, often using it to reach back and understand her past. "Art has given me a way of processing. I was studying writing, and suddenly found myself holding a camera and not wanting to let go of it; it became just a friend in my life," she says.A Career Built on Memory and ReconnectionShe first picked up a camera at 20, during graduate school at Columbia University. After graduating with a master's degree in journalism, she wanted to see the world, so she moved back to Moscow, Russia, where she was born. There she taught herself how to use the camera.Today, her lens serves as a tool for reconnecting with her past life and reclaiming it as her own. In her previous, highly regarded photo monograph Inventing My Father, she demonstrates her unique ability to reveal the unseen past through her images. Working on the book for 10 years, she depicts her journey of finding her father after 15 years of no contact, following her move to California in 1996 from Armenia, where he lives."Father, my previous work of the past decade, it's all rooted in memory, and I think what's beautiful about memory, there's a blend of fiction, interpretation, and it's very subjective," she says. "So I think I love existing in that territory because none of it is really real."
#Diana Markosian #Replaced #Photography
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Sports May 12, 2026

Premiership Rugby Title Race Intensifies as Front-runners Suffer Shock Defeats

Shock defeats for league leaders Northampton and Bath have dramatically shaken up the English Premi…
The Title Race UpendedUntil the recent weekend, it was widely assumed that Northampton and Bath, the two frontrunners in the English Premiership, were all but guaranteed home semi-finals and would almost certainly meet in the grand final. However, significant defeats have suddenly opened the door for other teams to enter the championship conversation.Weekend Shocks Reshape the LandscapeNot only did Northampton and Bath lose at the weekend but both were well beaten, with Northampton going down 41-17 to Leicester and Bath suffering a 35-12 defeat to Exeter. Bath's loss comes after they have now lost three games on the trot, including their Champions Cup semi-final in Bordeaux. Northampton's performance was particularly concerning as they were not just beaten but 'unceremoniously flattened' by their rivals.Historical Context and Statistical AnomaliesHistorical stats reveal interesting patterns. The last time Bath lost two consecutive league games under Johann van Graan was in October 2023, when several players were at the World Cup in France. Northampton, meanwhile, have never conceded as many points away against their East Midlands rivals' ground in the league as they did in their recent defeat.Psychological Shift in the Final RoundsThese weekend results have slightly tweaked the psychology around the run-in. While Northampton may have the league's slickest attack, injuries have been affecting their squad depth and their defense has become increasingly porous, with Saints shipping an average of more than 35 points in their past three league games. Leicester, having just put six tries past a Saints side containing numerous England players, will not be apprehensive about facing their old rivals again.Exeter's Momentum and Bath's FatigueExeter's victory over Bath was particularly telling. With a strong wind at their backs, their famed 'Bomb Squad' rumbling on for the last half hour and trailing by only six points entering the final quarter, everything was set up for Bath to pull the trigger. Instead, the Chiefs, playing into the elements, won the last 20 minutes by a margin of 17-0. The simplest explanation appears to be that Bath were mentally and physically exhausted after their European exertions, while Exeter showed greater resilience despite their own recent challenges.Playoff Picture and Potential ScenariosIt still seems most likely that Saints, Bath, Leicester and Exeter will occupy the playoff berths, unless either Bristol Bears or Saracens, finishing strongly, can force their way into contention. The potential matchups are fascinating: a weary, slightly depleted Northampton against a determined Exeter with Leicester hosting Bath rather than vice versa in the other semi-final. There may yet be a significant twist in this season's Premiership tale.
#Prem Rugby #Northampton Saints #Bath Rugby
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Sports May 11, 2026

Ridl’s Heroics Propel Exeter into Premiership Playoff Race

Campbell Ridl’s second‑half try and a bonus‑point conversion lifted Exeter to a 27‑10 win over Bath…
Exeter’s Crucial Victory Over Bath Secures Playoff MomentumCampbell Ridl and teammates Paul Brown‑Bampoe and Len Ikitau turned a solid first‑half lead into a decisive win, propelling Exeter into fourth place with a bonus‑point finish.Second‑Half Surge and Early Red Card Shift the GameA 20‑minute red card for Bath’s Quinn Roux early in the match forced the visitors onto the back foot. Exeter capitalised, extending the lead with a series of tries and disciplined defence despite windy conditions.Points Impact and Table ShiftFinal score: Exeter 27 – 10 BathBonus‑point earned, moving Exeter to fourth placeExeter now five points clear of Bristol in fifthBath remain in second place but must win remaining fixtures to secure a home semi‑finalImplications for the Premiership Playoff RaceThe win narrows the gap at the top of the table as Leicester and Saracens also finish strongly. Director of Rugby Rob Baxter hailed the result as a “huge” boost, emphasizing that the season is far from “petering out.”What’s Next for Exeter and BathWith only three regular‑season games left, Exeter will look to maintain momentum and secure a home semi‑final, while Bath must regroup after the Champions Cup disappointment and the loss to stay in contention. As head of rugby Johann van Graan warned, the playoff race will be decided “on the wire” in the first weekend of June.
#Exeter Chiefs #Bath Rugby #Campbell Ridl
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Sports May 10, 2026

Leicester Tigers Thrash Northampton Saints in Fiery Derby

Leicester Tigers secured a bonus-point win against Northampton Saints in a fiery derby match, deali…
The Derby Drama In a ferocious atmosphere, Leicester Tigers claimed a bonus-point win against Northampton Saints, moving them within one point of Bath and five points shy of the top spot. The Turning Point The match turned in Leicester's favor with an avalanche of 22 points scored in the 10 minutes either side of half-time, putting the contest out of Northampton's reach. The Data Analysis Leicester scored more points than ever before in this fixture. Multiple cards were shown, including a red card for Izaia Perese and several yellows. The Impact Analysis This defeat could have significant implications for Northampton's playoff chances, with their director of rugby, Phil Dowson, describing the loss as 'heartbreakingly disappointing.' The Prediction Northampton still hold their destiny in their own hands, but this loss may prove to be a significant psychological blow. Leicester, on the other hand, have boosted their chances of a strong finish to the season.
#Leicester Tigers #Northampton Saints #Rugby
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Sports May 10, 2026

Rugby Must Move Beyond Screen‑Obsessed Controversies, Says Analyst

A Champions Cup semi‑final in Bordeaux ignited a social‑media firestorm over disputed tackles, high…
A recent Champions Cup semi‑final in Bordeaux sparked a heated debate over refereeing decisions, prompting calls for rugby to curb its reliance on instant‑replay culture and social‑media outrage.Rugby’s Bordeaux Semi‑Final Highlights a Growing Media FrenzyThe match between Bath and Bordeaux drew a crowd of 42,000 in a packed stadium, yet the post‑match narrative was dominated by accusations of biased French TV direction and alleged missed penalties on Alfie Barbeary. Coaches, including Johann van Graan, and pundits flooded social platforms with calls for consistency.Numbers Behind the Outcry: Attendance, Penalties and Replay AnglesAttendance: 42,000 spectators, a near‑sell‑out for a club‑level European semi‑final.Contested incidents: three separate tackles on Barbeary were debated, yet none resulted in a penalty.Replay coverage: only two camera angles were available to the TMO, limiting the ability to review incidents.Why the TMO Debate Threatens Rugby’s IntegrityThe reliance on split‑second television analysis creates a “screen‑obsessed, finger‑pointing” environment that undermines on‑field authority. Junior coaches and fans mimic this behavior, leading to increased abuse of referees at lower levels and eroding respect for the sport’s governing bodies.Path Forward: Reducing Screen‑Centric DistractionsExperts propose muting the TMO microphone during live play, restricting slow‑motion replays to clear try‑scoring situations, and reserving post‑match reviews for truly egregious offences. Greater collaboration between French and British broadcasters could also standardise replay protocols.
#Bath Rugby #Bordeaux #Champions Cup
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Classical music May 10, 2026

Shostakovich's First Symphony at 100: A Masterpiece of Unbridled Creativity

This week marks the 100th anniversary of Dmitri Shostakovich's First Symphony, a masterpiece that s…
The Genesis of a Masterpiece This week we mark two extraordinary centenaries. Sir David Attenborough's, of course, but only four days after the birth of the bona fide national treasure, Dmitri Shostakovich's First Symphony also first saw the light of day – premiered in Leningrad on 12 May 1926. The 19-year-old's composition was played by the Leningrad Philharmonic, conducted by Nicolai Malko. The Revolutionary Sound The symphony's four-movement structure is just about the only conventional feature it has. The teenage Shostakovich had imbibed all the lessons he could about what orchestral music should sound like and how it should behave, and was bold enough to subvert all those ideas and send them up. There is no forelock-tugging to earlier generations of Russian symphonists and orchestral pioneers; instead, Shostakovich's First resounds with a self-confidence that's both optimistic and deliciously sardonic. A Circus of Sound From the distorted trumpet call that opens the work – a fanfare that thumbs its nose at your expectations of how a symphony should start; not an affirmative flourish, but a snakingly dissonant question mark – Shostakovich sets out on a first movement that's like a circus: a cavalcade of characters who take the stage and exit, more often than not pursued by a cartoon bear, clown or bassoon. The momentum that Shostakovich generates from the way he juxtaposes ideas – cutting from one to the other as if the symphony were a reel of film – continues deliriously in the second movement. Here, a piano part is added to the orchestral texture, and that's where one of the secrets of this music's compositional energy is revealed. As a teenager, Shostakovich played the piano for Soviet silent cinema screenings, and in the symphony's piano solos, he turns his work into a knockabout farce that Buster Keaton would be proud of. A Masterpiece of Unbridled Creativity The movement builds to a climax that is both terrifying – a sudden fanfare that consumes the whole orchestra – and bathetic, in the form of the solo piano's chords, as if the pianist couldn't keep up with the music's pace. There is no hint anywhere in this piece of the bombast and poster-paint ideology of Shostakovich's later symphonies, but there is real feeling here, hinted at in that climax of the scherzo, as the cartoon suddenly shudders into real life. The slow movement that comes next is one of the most unironically passionate that Shostakovich ever wrote, as a solo oboe and solo cello inspire the whole orchestra to a melodic outpouring that feels more Shakespearean drama than circus hijinks. A Legacy of Creative Freedom The final movement somehow brings all of these worlds together, and the symphony ends in a torrent of irresistible energy, a culmination of pure sentiment as well as sheer excitement. This is, surely, the most creatively confident First Symphony by any teenager in musical history (and there is plenty of competition, from Mendelssohn to Knussen, from Rihm to Schubert). It announces a world of possibility in which musical conventions are gleefully turned upside down in a frenzy of modernist creativity that's both funny and profound. It's the sound of a unique symphonic avant garde that might have heralded an era of unfettered creative freedom for Shostakovich and generations of composers. A What-If of History Instead, these are the sounds of what might have been, for Shostakovich and for Russia. In Shostakovich's later symphonies, especially from the mid-1930s onwards, you hear the chilling of that freedom and the daily terror of living in Stalin's Soviet Union. The confidence and joy in his own brilliance that you hear in every page of the First Symphony is a miracle that Shostakovich never quite repeated and which is still strikingly new, a century on.
#Dmitri Shostakovich #Classical music #Symphony
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Entertainment May 10, 2026

Legends review: Steve Coogan takes on Britain's biggest drug gang

The article reviews the Netflix series 'Legends', a six-part thriller based on the true story of a …
The Premise of Legends Imagine The A-Team but instead of a band of wrongfully convicted US army commandos who become soldiers of fortune, it's a group of dissatisfied baggage searchers and VAT investigators who have taken their ties off. This is the premise of Legends, a six-part thriller by Neil Forsyth based on the true story of a group of ordinary men and women recruited from the rank and file of Her Majesty's Customs in the early 90s, given three weeks' training and sent undercover to infiltrate and bring down two massive drug cartels that were filling Britain's streets with heroin. The Main Characters and Plot Steve Coogan stars as former undercover police officer Don Clarke. He puts the team together for the home secretary and HMC's director of investigations Angus Blake. The team includes Guy, a 'lone wolf' operator played by Tom Burke; Kate, a hardbitten, hotheaded Essex native played by Hayley Squires; Bailey, a more thoughtful, tentative character played by Aml Ameen; and Erin, a backroom data hound extraordinaire played by Jasmine Blackborow. The Challenge of Bringing the Story to Life The energy spent keeping things serious prevents the series catching fire. But it remains a brilliant story, here well told. The article concludes that Forsyth mostly, if sometimes very, very narrowly avoids falling into the ever yawning trap that a story about customs officers becoming the A-Team inevitably faces, which is the potential for bathos, if not outright risibility. Where to Watch Legends is on Netflix.
#Steve Coogan #Legends #Netflix
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Entertainment May 10, 2026

Rebel Wilson Accused of Being a 'Fantastical Liar' in Defamation Battle

Rebel Wilson has been accused of being a 'fantastical liar' who made up allegations against her col…
The Accusation Against Rebel Wilson Rebel Wilson has been accused in court of being a liar who made up terrible claims about her colleagues and completely rewrote history. The Pitch Perfect star copped the blunt assessment in the dying hours of a fiery defamation battle where she is being sued by Charlotte MacInnes, the lead actor in musical comedy The Deb which Wilson directed, co-produced and starred in. The Defamation Claims MacInnes claims Wilson defamed her in a series of social media posts that suggested she is a liar and a sellout who walked back a sexual misconduct complaint to further her career. The posts claimed MacInnes confided to the older actor – and later recanted – she felt uncomfortable when the film’s co-producer Amanda Ghost asked to have a shower and a bath together. The Inconsistencies in Wilson's Evidence MacInnes’ barrister Sue Chrysanthou SC accused Wilson of a “complete revision of history” littered with dishonesty during her emphatic closing address in the Federal Court on Friday. She noted the Bridesmaids actor testified she told local producer Greer Simpkin about the alleged complaint on the day it was made to her, but that had been contradicted in court. Simpkin gave evidence she had not heard that Wilson claimed her co-star felt uncomfortable about the incident until it was relayed by Ghost a week later. Wilson's own witnesses have discredited her, Chrysanthou told the court. The Impact on MacInnes MacInnes has suffered devastating harm as a result of the social media posts and hasn’t worked since she starred in a stage production – a role which she had previously secured, her barrister said. “My client has been unable to eat, unable to sleep, has been distressed … (she) fears what Rebel Wilson is going to do to her next,” Chrysanthou said. “No young woman dreams of being pulled into the spotlight by a celebrity and maligned”. Wilson's Response But Wilson testified the young star doesn’t appear to have sustained any damage to her reputation or career, pointing to the lead role and a six-figure record deal MacInnes has secured. “She’s changed her story, she’s flip-flopped and she’s been given huge benefits,” she said.
#Rebel Wilson #Charlotte MacInnes #Defamation Case
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Sports May 01, 2026

Alfie Barbeary on England Ambitions and Champions Cup

Alfie Barbeary, the Bath Rugby player, discusses his ambitions for England and his team's chances i…
The Unlikely Star of Champions Cup Alfie Barbeary, the shaggy-haired Bath colossus, is up for the Champions Cup player of the year award. The 25-year-old might not yet be a connoisseur of Bordeaux's celebrated wines, but he makes up for that in other respects. Barbeary's Road to Success Barbeary's journey to success has not been without its challenges. He has had to overcome injury problems and adapt his playing style to become a dominant force in the rugby world. The Impact of Barbeary's Playing Style Barbeary's unique playing style, which includes his upright carrying technique, has made him a valuable asset to his team. His ability to break open games has earned him recognition, including a player-of-the-match award in the quarter-final win over Northampton. England Ambitions Barbeary has ambitions to play for England, but he believes that thinking too much about it can be counter-productive. "I try not to think about it. I've had this problem before when I've been chasing England [selection]. It gets into my head, I start overthinking stuff and I don't play well. If you focus on yourself and play well then hopefully everything falls into place," he said. The Future Barbeary will be joining Saracens this summer, but he is determined to win more silverware with Bath before he leaves. A strong performance in the Champions Cup could earn him the Investec player-of-the-year award.
#Alfie Barbeary #Bath Rugby #Champions Cup
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