Inspired by Islamic art, artist Julia Ebeni brings the traditional motifs of this region to life in her studio on Saadiyat Island, Abu Dhabi. It is a process that combines contemporary art, computational geometry, and machine precision. Born in the United Arab Emirates, Julia often roams the streets of Abu Dhabi for inspiration for her works of paper cut and laser-cut layers of wood.
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A photographer monitors the atmosphere of work offices in the nineties.. grim faces and invisible characters
Dubai, United Arab Emirates (CNN) — The “Covid-19” pandemic has disrupted the role offices used to play in our lives. According to a Pew Research Center survey published in February, six out of ten American workers do their jobs from home often or all the time. Among those, the research indicated that only 42% of them cited the coronavirus as a main reason for this, while more than 75% of respondents expressed a preference for simply working from home.
While many wonder if offices are ever needed, archival photos by photographer Stephen Ahlgren of American workplaces remind us of not so long ago.
For 11 years, Ahlgren has been taking photographs that provide a glimpse into the nature of business within companies in the 1990s and early 2000s.
While there, he was photographing offices equipped with square computer machines, fax machines, and labyrinths of cables that mimic the technological transformations of the past two decades. But the photographer’s photos are also curiously intimate, showing employees staring at papers, talking on desk phones, or attending meetings lit up by fluorescent tubes.
“I was watching and taking some pictures while they were doing what they normally do,” he told CNN.
In the end, Ahlgren can identify with his subjects, since he was a banker before his career in photography, finding himself in the form of a young man standing in front of a Xerox copier with his hands in the pockets of his pants, immersed in his thoughts.

“It’s the closest I’ve ever taken a selfie,” Ahlgren said, adding, “I was standing like that when I worked at the bank.”
He explained, “I feel bitter regarding the years I spent working in banking, because they were a waste of time,” adding that “when I started the photography project I thought that there are people who waste their lives, just like me. But I sympathized with them following that, because maybe they loved their work.”
The seemingly bleak scenes make a compelling case for the end of office time as we know it. The purity of the whites of the walls and file cabinets is rarely disturbed by joyful colors, whether bright ties, decorations, or framed artwork.
But for many people, the photos will evoke feelings of nostalgia. Because in each of these pictures there are success stories and achievements.
emotional charging
Ahlgren’s institutional past wasn’t his only inspiration. He was influenced by Edward Hopper’s oil painting The Office at Night. The 1940 painting, featuring an elegant man sitting behind his desk and a young woman in front of an adjacent filing cabinet, invites viewers to speculate regarding a possible connection between the two.

In the 1980s, Ahlgren was increasingly bored by his work as a banker in Minneapolis, Minnesota, which made him a regular visitor to the nearby Walker Art Center, where this painting is displayed.
Describing Hopper’s artwork, Ahlgren said, “What I take away from this work is the idea of being in a very ordinary everyday situation, in an ordinary office, and making it exciting in order to somehow fill the narrative tension.”

Ahlgren wasn’t using the lighting we see in Huber, which focuses on singularities and casts powerful geometric shades, as before, because he didn’t use his own lighting that was completely clinical, tied to that of the specific office in which he was fitted. But the painter’s influence is also evident in the calm intensity and poetic ambiguity in his images, where he often depicts the staff alone, or in interaction with unseen characters, with sullen faces.
Ahlgren begins his new book, The Office, with more than 60 images, with the American painter’s desk. “I have been more excited to think of Hopper’s desk pad than any other work I have ever had to bring on my own,” he wrote in the accompanying introduction.
Even so, Ahlgren has fond memories of his old office in Minneapolis, which he describes as a “beautiful space” adorned with paintings bought by his art-loving former company manager. And while the pandemic has given him the perfect time to re-evaluate these images, criticizing corporate life “was never the photographer’s goal”.
Nor is he convinced that the “whole office dilemma” was caused by the pandemic, which did not herald the end of physical workplaces.
“I know I will find it difficult to work at home,” Ahlgren concluded. “I watched my daughters in college and my wife work from home, and it almost drove me crazy.”
‘Strange Lawyer Woo Young-woo’ Park Eun-bin, Kang Tae-oh and Ha Yoon-kyung’s friendly appearance
Kang Tae-oh revealed his feelings for Park Eun-bin.
In the 6th episode of the ENA channel’s Wed-Thu drama ‘Strange Lawyer Woo Young-woo’ (directed by Yoo In-sik / written by Moon Ji-won), which was broadcast on the 14th (Thursday), Lee Jun-ho (Kang Tae-oh) was depicted talking to Kwon Min-woo (Joo Jong-hyuk) while he was drunk.
On this day, while drinking with Kwon Min-woo, Lee Jun-ho confessed, “There is a certain person, and I think I’m making him think that way because I don’t like him.” Recognizing his feelings for Woo Young-woo (Park Eun-bin). When Kwon Min-woo advised, “Tell me you like it,” Jun-ho Lee replied, “It’s not that simple.”
Kwon Min-woo: “Why? It’s in-house love. Hopefully it won’t be Woo Young-woo.” Then Junho Lee said, “You are an idiot who only knows who you are. Go to sleep.” He lay down.


The next day, Kwon Min-woo saw Lee Jun-ho and Choi Su-yeon (Ha Yoon-kyung) having a conversation, and said to Woo Young-woo, “The two of us go well together, right?” In addition, he said, “Doesn’t our Junho seem to like Choi Soo-yeon’s lawyer? Doesn’t the right side know regarding that?” and then left. Woo Young-woo was taken aback by Lee Jun-ho and Choi Su-yeon’s friendly appearance.
Viewers reacted through various SNS and portal sites, such as “Junho is obsessed with Woo Young-woo’s charm”, “Young-woo and Jun-ho are starting to care, so this is both sides”, “Don’t sting everywhere with your knucklehead trickster” have.
Meanwhile, ‘Strange Lawyer Woo Young-woo’ is a drama regarding the survival of a new lawyer with a genius brain and an autism spectrum at a large law firm, and is broadcast every Wednesday and Thursday at 9 PM.
iMBC Kim Hye-young | ENA screen capture
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How often should jeans be washed? This is the peculiar advice of the experts | Life
Although many are used to washing the popular garments in each use, this custom would be ending the useful life of each garment.
It does not matter if you prefer to dress elegant, rocker, hippie or casual, chances are that every wardrobe in the world has at least one garment of denim, denim or jeans. However, many are unaware that the useful life of your jeans can be affected depending on how often you wash these types of clothes.
Denim, which is commonly used in pants and jackets, stands out for its long duration, although, despite the belief of many, this type of garment needs special care different from the rest of the wardrobe.
It may have happened to many: the dream pants little by little begin to lose their shape or even lose their original color. Faced with these problems, there is a common advice among experts: decrease how often you wash.
Despite the hygiene criticism, the advice even came from Chip Bergh, chairman and chief executive of the famous brand Levi Strauss & Co., known for its various jean garments. In conversation with Fortune magazine, the boss of the expert company ventured to say that denim clothes should never be washedat least not in a washing machine.
“The jeans I’m wearing are maybe a year old and they haven’t seen a washing machine yet,” Bergh said in the conversation, according to what was reported. Marie Claire magazine. “If you talk to real denim experts, they will advise you not to wash the jeans”he pointed.
That achievement, disgusting for many, ends up being, according to the medium, andl advice of different brands of premium denim garmentssince by avoiding washing, the fit, resistance and color of each piece are preserved.
“I know that sounds totally disgusting. But it can be done: you can clean a stain, you can air it out, but believe me, can be kept unwashed”he asserted.
The specialized fashion magazine advises that, in case you want to follow the advice, when a denim begins to smell bad, can be left in the freezer for 24 hoursas this would kill the germs that cause the bad smell.
Who follows this advice is the fashion designer Victoria Beckham, who in an interview with Elle He assured that he “rarely” washes denim garments.
“If the kids spill something on them, then I have to wash them off, obviously, but even then, I only do it with cold water. But I usually don’t wash them at all.”he assured then, also advising to hang the garments to maintain their shape.
What if I want to wash my jeans?
Although they have their advice to avoid bringing clothes closer to the washing machine, this is not an unbreakable law. According to the official Levis websitethe clothes They can be washed every 10 uses.
So, they advise turning the garment inside out to prevent it from losing its color and unfolding its extremities. Likewise, They recommend using cold water and letting them hang to dry.
Similarly, regarding stains, recommend using “a damp cloth or an old toothbrush with a mild soap to remove them.
On the other hand, the founder of the 3×1 brand, Scott Morrison, was also once morest the washing machine in a conversation with Bussines Insidernoting that “following three or six months carrying daily a pair of blue jeans, maybe they need some attention.”
So, Morrison advised let the garment soak, preferably in a tub, with cold soapy water, for 45 minutes. The garment can then be placed between two towels to remove excess moisture and hang them from the feet down.