There's an earth-friendly human behind every pair of Chicago-based Ms. Amy Taylor's gorgeous, natural-dyed underwear.
In her new novel "Hard Mouth," this former St. Louisan explores the impulse for escape that hits when life takes an unexpected turn for the worse.
It’s a humid morning, and the Pulitzer Arts Foundation in Saint Louis’ Grand Center Arts District is wreathed in a bevy of shifting clouds.
Wearing thin circle-rimmed glasses, dark-brown curls pulled back into a ponytail and all smiles, a young Eve Ewing walked into a Chicago auditorium with her mother alongside her.
“I was given an education on function and form, and I’ve poured that background into my mobiles, website, everything I do.”
Our interview with author Megan Stielstra about writing, creativity and her brand-new essay collection.
At its headquarters, which Katz jokingly calls “the mother ship,” the elements of each new restaurant are highly considered—from the location to the designer to the lease and to the chef.
Revealing the synergy that can result when the proverbial right and left brain hemispheres befriend one another, Lerma has built a roster of solo and group exhibitions around the globe.
"I’m not an industry dude—I got into photography through a different route. I’ve always loved culture, and photography became this gateway to get to know different cultures. It gives you a kind of courage."
Twenty-nine-year-old Lauren Ash understands firsthand the necessity of safe spaces for marginalized populations, specifically women of color. Thus, she founded Chicago-based Black Girl In Om.
Born in 1976 in Kenitra, Morocco and raised in the suburbs of Chicago, Mariam Paré has made art all her life. Scanning her vivid panoply of paintings and multimedia canvases, one is struck by at once their accessibility and wild variety.