The Guardian

Latest news, sport, business, comment, analysis and reviews from the Guardian, the world's leading liberal voice

US justice department accuses Yale medical school of illegally using race in admissions

A 2023 supreme court decision banned the use of affirmative action in college admissions

The justice department on Thursday accused Yale University of illegally considering race in admissions to its medical school – the second institution to face discrimination allegations by the federal agency this month.

In a letter to a lawyer for Yale, Harmeet Dhillon, assistant attorney general for civil rights, said a justice department investigation found that Black and Hispanic students have a much higher chance of admission to the medical school than white or Asian students, despite having lower grade-point averages and lower test scores.

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NSPCC reports sharp rise in children being blackmailed over sexual images in UK

Charity says calls to its Childline service about online sexual abuse and exploitation have risen 36% in a year

Children reported a rise in online blackmail attempts involving sexual images in the UK last year, according to a leading charity.

The NSPCC said contacts with its Childline service relating to online sexual abuse and exploitation rose by 36% last year, driven by an increase in cases related to online blackmail.

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Premier League and FA Cup final: 10 things to look out for this weekend

Guardiola can claim 17th City trophy, Arteta weighs up another Arsenal reshuffle and Brentford’s European dreams could edge closer

A measure of Pep Guardiola’s greatness is to be found in Saturday’s FA Cup final being a 24th visit to Wembley leading Manchester City. As this born winner could depart in the close season, the meeting with Chelsea may be a third-last outing in charge, in which he seeks the opposite result to the 2021 Champions League final. Yet Chelsea are now in a state of flux – Calum McFarlane is in a second caretaker spell of the season, following Liam Rosenior’s sacking last month, having also filled in when Enzo Maresca walked out on 1 January. This points to a City triumph and the 17th major trophy of Guardiola’s reign. But this is football, so who knows? Jamie Jackson

FA Cup final: Chelsea v Manchester City, Saturday 3pm (all times BST)

Aston Villa v Liverpool, Friday 8pm

Manchester United v Nottingham Forest, Sunday 12.30pm

Brentford v Crystal Palace, Sunday 3pm

Everton v Sunderland, Sunday 3pm

Wolves v Fulham, Sunday 3pm

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Renowned feminist artist and film-maker Valie Export dies aged 85

Export’s performances scandalised Austria in the 1960s, but are now recognised for exposing the objectification of the female body

Valie Export, the Austrian performance artist and film-maker who inverted the male gaze in ways that were provocative, shocking and often outrageously fun, has died aged 85.

The artist’s own foundation announced on Thursday evening that Export died in Vienna earlier the same day, three days before her 86th birthday.

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One dead and two more ill after meningitis outbreak in Berkshire

Health officials say close contacts being offered antibiotics as a precaution after cases discovered in Reading

A young person has died and two others are being treated after an outbreak of meningitis in Berkshire, health officials have said.

It follows a major outbreak in Kent, linked to a Canterbury nightclub, that killed two people and left more than a dozen needing hospital treatment in March.

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Antidepressants in pregnancy do not raise children’s risk of autism or ADHD, study finds

Researchers say risk comes from ‘other factors, including genetic predisposition to mental health conditions’

Taking antidepressants during pregnancy does not increase the risk of children going on to develop autism or attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), according to an analysis of more than half a million pregnancies.

The study, conducted by researchers at the University of Hong Kong and published in the Lancet Psychiatry, analysed data from 37 existing studies that included 600,000 pregnant women who had taken antidepressants, and 25 million women who had no antidepressant use during their pregnancies.

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CIA director has met officials in Havana for talks, Cuba claims

Visit comes after US-Cuba relations deteriorated significantly, with Washington imposing a fuel blockade on the island in January

CIA director John Ratcliffe met Cuban officials in Havana on Thursday as a way to improve dialogue between the US and the communist-run island, the Cuban government said.

The meeting took place “in a context marked by the complexity of bilateral relations, with the aim of contributing to the political dialogue between both nations”, a statement said.

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Weight-loss jabs could halve sickness absence and ease strain on NHS, study suggests

Research shows sick leave among patients prescribed GLP-1 injections over nine-month period reduced by 50%

Weight-loss drugs could halve sickness absence and significantly reduce the strain on the NHS, research suggests.

A UK study of patients who received GLP-1 jabs for nine months found sickness days fell by nearly half and sickness absence lasting five days or more fell by more than 50%. Analysis of the findings suggests expanding access could cut A&E attendance by obese patients by a quarter and free up nearly 10m GP appointments.

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Tape shows Bolsonaro son asking jailed banker for $26.8m to fund film on father

Revelation seen as serious blow to candidacy of Flávio Bolsonaro, Brazil’s leading rightwing presidential hopeful

Flávio Bolsonaro, Brazil’s leading rightwing presidential hopeful, has been caught on tape asking a banker accused of corruption for $26.8m (£20m) to fund a film about his father, the former president Jair Bolsonaro.

The leaked voice memos and text messages were published on Wednesday by the Intercept Brasil, and later acknowledged by Flávio Bolsonaro, a far-right senator who is tied in polls with President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva ahead of October’s election.

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Parallel Tales review – Isabelle Huppert pens furtive sexual fantasy for Vincent Cassel in Asghar Farhadi’s latest

Cannes film festival: Iranian auteur Asghar Farhadi returns to France with this intriguing middleweight meta-drama featuring a cameo from Catherine Deneuve

Asghar Farhadi is the Iranian auteur whose film-making style has always shown the high European influences of Antonioni and Haneke. He has in fact made two films in Europe: The Past in France and Everybody Knows in Spain.

Now he returns to France and the French language for this diverting, middleweight meta-drama about betrayal and about a supposed link between voyeurism and creativity: do writers spy on the characters they have brought to life?

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VK: Voorpagina

Volkskrant.nl biedt het laatste nieuws, opinie en achtergronden

Noodverordening in Stadskanaal na aanhouding twee vrouwen vanwege kindermishandeling

Favorieten Denemarken en Australië door naar finale Eurovisie Songfestival

The Register

Biting the hand that feeds IT — Enterprise Technology News and Analysis

Cerebras risked it all on dinner plate-sized AI accelerators a decade ago. Today it’s worth $66 billion

Cerebras Systems has done what many chip startups aspire to but few ever achieve. On Thursday, the company and long-time Nvidia rival raised $5.55 billion in an initial public offering (IPO), making the company worth more than $66 billion on its first day of trading. The milestone didn’t happen overnight. It took more than a decade, a radically different approach to chipmaking, and two separate attempts at an IPO to pull off. Founded in 2015 by former SeaMicro head Andrew Feldman, Cerebras Systems' first chips looked nothing like GPUs or AI accelerators of the time. The bet that put Cerebras on the map At the time, most high-end GPUs used dies measuring roughly 800 square mm that’d been cut from a larger wafer. Eight or more of these GPUs would typically be stitched together by high-speed interconnects, like NVLink, which allowed them to pool their resources and behave like one big accelerator. Rather than cutting up a wafer into smaller chips just to reconnect them again, Cerebras figured why not etch all that compute into a wafer-sized chip? And so the Wafer-Scale Engine (WSE), a giant chip measuring 46,225 square mm — about the size of a dinner plate — was born. Cerebras' first chips weren’t just bigger; they were purpose-built for AI training and sported a novel compute engine designed to speed up the highly sparse matrix multiply-accumulate operations common in deep learning. This hardware sparsity took advantage of the fact that large portions of a neural network’s parameters ultimately end up being zeros, allowing Cerebras to boost the effective computational output of its first-gen WSE accelerators from 2.65 16-bit petaFLOPS to 26.5. Nvidia added support for sparsity in its Ampere generation a year later, but it only worked for a specific ratio (2:4), limiting its effectiveness to select use cases. To train a model, up to 16 of these chips could be ganged together over a high-speed interconnect. This was kind of important too, because unlike GPUs, which stored model weights in HBM or GDDR memory, Cerebras' chips were almost entirely reliant on on-chip SRAM. Although SRAM is insanely fast, which is why it’s used for caches in basically every modern processor, it’s not particularly space efficient. While Cerebras' first wafer-scale accelerator could theoretically reach 9 petabytes per second of memory bandwidth, it was limited to just 18 GB of capacity at a time when Nvidia was already at 32 GB per GPU and about to make the leap to 40 GB or even 80 GB per chip. Still, the approach was performant enough that for its second-generation wafer-scale accelerator, launched in 2021, Cerebras doubled down on the architecture. While the WSE-2 wasn’t physically larger, the move to TSMC’s 7nm process tech allowed the company to more than double the transistor count, compute density, SRAM capacity, and bandwidth. The chips also supported larger clusters, scaling up to 192, though in practice these clusters were usually smaller at between 16 and 32 systems per site. It was also around this time that Cerebras caught the attention of United Arab Emirates-based cloud provider G42, which quickly became its largest financier. By mid-2023, the chip startup had secured orders worth $900 million for nine supercomputing sites with a 36 exaFLOPS of super sparse AI compute between them. A year later, Cerebras made the jump to TSMC’s 5nm process with the WSE-3 and while memory and bandwidth only saw modest gains, compute once again doubled now topping a 125 petaFLOPS of Sparse (12.5 petaFLOPS dense) compute at 16-bit precision. Cerebras’ CS-3 systems have now seen the largest deployment, and now power the majority of the Condor Galaxy cluster it built for G42, as well as several new sites across North America and Europe. Cerebras' inference inflection Up to mid-2024, Cerebras' primary focus had been on training, but then the company announced a boutique inference-as-a-service offering to rival those from competing chip startups like Groq and SambaNova. It turns out, Cerebras’ latest AI accelerators’ massive SRAM capacity not only made them potent training accelerators but particularly well suited to high-speed LLM inference. In its third iteration, Cerebras' wafer scale accelerators boasted more memory bandwidth than they could realistically use. At 21 PB/s, the chip’s memory is nearly 1000x faster than Nvidia’s new Rubin GPUs. This, along with a dash of speculative decoding, allowed Cerebras to generate tokens far faster than any GPU-based system of the time. Even today, Cerebras routinely ranks among the fastest inference providers in the world. According to Artificial Analysis, Cerebras' kit can churn out more than 2,200 tokens a second when running GPT-OSS 120B High, 2.8x faster than the next closed GPU cloud Fireworks. Cerebras didn’t know it at the time, but its inference platform would be a much bigger business than anyone had expected, and in September 2024, the company submitted its S-1 filing to the SEC to take the company public. Almost exactly a year later, Feldman quietly pulled its S-1, delaying its IPO. His reasons? The company’s initial S-1 filing was rather concerning, as it showed G42 was responsible for 87 percent of its revenues. But in the year since launching its inference platform, Cerebras had racked up several high-profile customer wins from big names like Alphasense, AWS, Cognition, Meta, Mistral AI, Notion, and Perplexity. Feldman explained that the initial S-1 didn’t yet show the financial results of this growth. The company believed it would have a better story to tell investors later down the road. Cerebras' inference platform has only grown since then. The company has steadily expanded its footprint while announcing deeper relationships with AWS and adding OpenAI as a customer. On Thursday, the startup officially joined the NASDAQ under the ticker CBRS, having raised $5.5 billion in the process. Shares skyrocketed nearly 70 percent on the first day of trading, as investors poured their money into a new way to play the AI boom. An IPO is something many startups aspire to but few, especially in the cut throat world of semiconductors, ever accomplish. What happens now From a technical perspective, Cerebras is overdue for a refresh. The WSE-3 accelerators that pushed it over the IPO finish line are getting rather long in the tooth and the architecture lead afforded by its SRAM-heavy design is shrinking. Nvidia’s acquihire of Groq gave Feldman’s long-time rival an SRAM-packed inference platform of its own, while others are racing to catch up. From here, we can only speculate, but we’ll hazard a guess that Cerebras' new shareholders are going to want to see new silicon sooner than later. Based on its existing roadmap, we expect WSE-4 will offer a sizable leap in floating point performance, though not necessarily at 16-bit precision. Much of the industry has aligned around lower precision data types like FP8 and FP4. An exaFLOP of ultra-sparse FP4 compute wouldn’t shock us in the least. How useful sparsity would actually be for LLM inference is another matter. LLM inference hasn’t historically benefited much from sparsity, but that’s never stopped chipmakers from advertising sparse FLOPS anyway. We also expect to see Cerebras pack more SRAM into its next wafer scale compute platform, possibly using TSMC’s 3D chip stacking tech to do it. The WSE-3’s 44GB of SRAM capacity remains a limiting factor for what models it can and can’t serve efficiently. A trillion parameter model like Kimi K2 would require somewhere between 12 and 48 of Cerebras' WSE-3 accelerators, depending on how the model weights are stored and how many parameters have been pruned, and so any increase in SRAM capacity would go a long way toward improving the efficiency of its accelerators. More collaborations Alongside new silicon, we can also expect to see more collaborations akin to Cerebras' tie-up with AWS. Earlier this year, AWS announced it would combine its Trainium3 AI accelerators with Cerebras' WSE-3-based systems to speed up its inference platform in much the same way Nvidia is doing with Groq’s accelerators. Cerebras could certainly do something similar with AMD or any other chipmaker. In this sense, Cerebras is in the position to offer its chips as a decode accelerator, which offloads the bandwidth intensive parts of the inference pipeline onto its chips, while other parts handle the compute heavy prompt processing side of the equation. However, Cerebras frames its next collab; its shareholders are going to expect growth. And as the saying goes, the enemy of my enemy is my friend. ®

Nobody believes the 'criminals and scumbags' who hacked Canvas really deleted stolen student data

FEATURE When Instructure “reached an agreement” with data theft and extortion crew ShinyHunters this week, the education tech giant assured Canvas users after attackers claimed to have stolen data tied to 275 million students, teachers, and staff that their private chats and email addresses would not turn up on a dark-web marketplace, and that they would not be extorted over the incident. “We received digital confirmation of data destruction (shred logs),” Instructure assured the nearly 9,000 affected universities and K-12 schools. “We have been informed that no Instructure customers will be extorted as a result of this incident, publicly or otherwise.” Not a single responder that The Register spoke with believes this is true. “Do I believe they deleted the data? No. They're criminals and scumbags,” Recorded Future threat intelligence analyst Allan Liska, aka the Ransomware Sommelier, told us. “But, this is part of what Max Smeets calls ‘The Ransomware Trust Paradox,’” he added. “Ransomware groups have to, minimally, not post data they claimed to have deleted or no one will pay them in the future, but this is done knowing that the data is likely not deleted.” Halcyon Ransomware Research Center SVP Cynthia Kaiser, who previously spent two decades at the FBI, said she doesn’t think that anyone who studies ransomware groups’ operations believes the gang actually destroyed the stolen files. “‘We destroyed the data’ is a standard line from extortion groups once a payment is made or negotiations conclude, but time after time it has proven untrue,” Kaiser told The Register. “ShinyHunters in particular has a documented history of recycling, reselling, and re-leveraging stolen data across campaigns – data they claimed was contained from earlier intrusions has resurfaced on criminal forums months and years later.” Kaiser also doesn’t think this is the last threat that the schools will face from the Canvas breach. “Halcyon expects targeted phishing waves against staff, students, and parents over the next six to 12 months using leaked names, email addresses, and Canvas chat context to make the lures convincing,” she said. To be clear: Instructure execs never directly said the company paid the ransom, and we don’t know the exact amount of money the criminals demanded from the digital learning biz. We do know, however, that “reached an agreement” is corporate-speak for the victim paid up. Doug Thompson, chief education architect at cybersecurity firm Tanium, estimates the figure sits somewhere between $5 million and $30 million. Meanwhile, this latest extortion attack illustrates the impossible choice facing organizations entrusted with protecting people’s data when digital thieves breach their networks and steal sensitive information. “The FBI says don’t pay,” Thompson told The Register. “But the operational reality at 3 a.m. during finals week or enrollment season can push institutions toward a very different calculation. Until that incentive structure changes, education is likely to remain unusually vulnerable to extortion pressure.” To pay, or not to pay? The US federal government, law enforcement agencies, and private-sector threat intelligence analysts all advise victims not to pay a ransom. “Paying ransoms rewards and incentivizes the criminals, funding their search for new victims, and I’ve long advocated before for a ban on ransomware payments,” Emsisoft threat analyst Luke Connolly told us. “But in the absence of regulation applying to all organizations, the stark reality is that Instructure faced a crisis, and they negotiated to try to minimize risk and harm.” No company wants to pay a ransom to its attackers, and most say they won’t – at least in principle – because they don’t want to fund criminal operations and incentivize the crooks. There’s also no guarantee that paying will guarantee the return of their data or prevent additional extortion attempts. CrowdStrike surveyed 1,100 global security leaders last summer, and of the 78 percent who said they experienced a ransomware attack in the past year, 83 percent of those that paid ransoms were attacked again. Plus 93 percent lost data regardless of payment. While data suggests that fewer organizations are paying criminals’ ransom demands - Chainalysis found the percentage of paying victims in 2025 dropped to an all-time low of 28 percent, despite attacks hitting record highs - when faced with extortion or a ransomware infection, the "to pay or not to pay" debate becomes much more complicated. “Most organizations still say publicly that they won't pay, and many genuinely don't, but when the alternative is mass downstream harm to students, parents, and thousands of customer institutions, the calculus shifts,” Kaiser said. “Pay-or-leak groups like ShinyHunters specifically engineer that calculus by creating intense financial and reputational pressure, and when demands go unmet, they escalate to direct harassment of victim companies, employees, and clients.” ShinyHunters did just that. The crew initially compromised Instructure in late April, and after the initial pay-or-leak deadline passed on May 6, ShinyHunters switched tactics to school-by-school extortion. They injected a ransom message into about 330 Canvas school login portals, causing Instructure to take the platform offline for a day - during final exams and Advanced Placement testing for many. Other ransomware scum have gone to horrifying extremes, posting pictures and addresses of preschool children in an effort to get a payday, leaking cancer patients’ nude photos and threatening them with swatting attacks. Mandiant Consulting CTO Charles Carmakal previously told The Register that ransomware infections have morphed into "psychological attacks” with crooks SIM swapping executives’ kids to pressure their parents into paying. Calculating risk In addition to responding to criminals directly harassing their students, patients, customers and employees, victim organizations also have to take into account potential lawsuits if the crooks dump individuals’ personal or health data, and the reputational hit from seeing all of this protected information published online. The decision about what to do in a ransomware attack revolves around risk reduction, Liska said. “Not paying a ransom means an increased risk of data exposure, which in this case could cause serious harm,” he told us. “While there is no good decision in most ransomware negotiations, the idea is to protect as many people as possible and that may mean that paying is the least bad option.” While he didn’t respond to or investigate the Instructure case, “protecting children's data is absolutely a critical factor in these types of decisions, especially when the attacks originate from one of the groups associated with The Com,” Liska added. The Com, a loosely knit group of primarily English speakers who are also involved in several interconnected networks of hackers, SIM swappers, and extortionists such as ShinyHunters and Scattered Lapsus$ Hunters, has been known to blackmail kids and teens into carrying out shootings, stabbings, and other real-life criminal acts. “These groups are known to coerce victims using threats of physical harm, including bricking and swatting," he said. "Not paying may have increased the risk of serious harm to the children whose data was exposed.” Ed sector 'more likely to pay' Instructure’s intrusion follows several other high-profile attacks against education-sector software providers. In December 2024, PowerSchool suffered a breach, affecting tens of millions of students. The company reportedly paid about $2.85 million in bitcoin in exchange for a video supposedly showing the attackers destroying the data. But about five months later, in May 2025, the ed-tech provider’s school district customers received individual extortion threats from either the same ransomware crew that hit PowerSchool or someone connected to the crooks. Earlier this year, ShinyHunters claimed it stole data from K-12 software provider Infinite Campus as part of a broader wave of Salesforce-related intrusions. “Education keeps emerging as one of the sectors where organizations are still more likely to pay under pressure,” Thompson said. In addition to students’ – especially minors’ – data containing highly sensitive personal details, and therefore presenting an attractive target for attackers, this is also driven in part by market pressure and economics. It’s costly and inconvenient for schools to switch learning management systems, and they are typically locked into multi-year contracts with these software vendors, according to Thompson. “The other issue is concentration,” he said. “A relatively small number of vendors hold data for enormous portions of the education system. PowerSchool, Infinite Campus, Canvas, Blackboard; those four hold records on something close to every American student, and hackers know it. Three of the four have been breached at a multi-million-record scale in the last 18 months.” Thompson said he expects to see additional attacks against major education platforms to follow. “The economics are good. Instructure paid. PowerSchool paid last year. Every other ed-tech vendor's board just had a conversation about what their number would be,” he told us. “The pattern is established.” According to Connolly, the universities and K-12 schools affected by the Canvas hack shouldn’t consider their data safe, regardless of Instructure’s assurances or the crooks' promises to delete it. “There will be future attacks, without a doubt.” ®

Slashdot

News for nerds, stuff that matters

Claude Helps Recover Locked $400K Bitcoin Wallet After 11 Years

A Bitcoin holder reportedly recovered 5 BTC worth nearly $400,000 with the help of Anthropic's Claude. According to X user cprkrn, they changed their wallet password while "stoned" and forgot it, unable to regain access for more than 11 years. Tom's Hardware reports:
After finding a mnemonic that actually turned out to be their old password a few weeks ago, the user dumped their entire college computer files in Claude in a last-gasp effort. The bot uncovered an old backup wallet file that it successfully decrypted, while also uncovering a bug in the password configuration that was preventing recovery up to that point.

[...] It seems that the user already had some candidate passwords and multiple wallets stored on their PC. They'd been trying to brute-force their way into the locked file with btcrecover, an open-source Bitcoin wallet recovery tool, but to no success. Their luck changed for the better when they found an old mnemonic seed phrase written in an old college notebook. The HD addresses recovered by the seed phrase matched those of a specific file on their computer, confirming that it was the wallet that held the 5 BTC, but it remained encrypted.

Out of frustration, cprkrn then dumped their whole college computer into Claude. This was when the AI discovered an older backup file of the wallet from December 2019 hidden in cprkrn's data. Claude also discovered an issue where the shared key and passwords that btcrecover was trying weren't combined properly. With the bug ironed out and an older wallet predating the password change, Claude successfully ran btcrecover and was able to decrypt the private keys, allowing cprkrn to transfer the five "lost" BTC to their current wallet.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Princeton Will Supervise Exams For First Time In 133 Years Because of AI

An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Independent: Princeton University will soon require exams to be supervised for the first time in 100 years -- all thanks to students using artificial intelligence to cheat. For 133 years, the Ivy League school's honor code allowed students to take exams without a professor present, but on Monday, faculty voted to require proctoring for all in-person exams starting this summer. A "significant" number of undergraduate students and faculty requested the change, "given their perception that cheating on in-class exams has become widespread," the college's dean, Michael Gordin, wrote in a letter, according to The Wall Street Journal.

Princeton's honor system dates back to 1893, when students petitioned to eliminate proctors -- or an impartial person to supervise students -- during examinations, according to the school's newspaper, The Daily Princetonian. The honor code has long been a point of pride for Princeton. However, artificial intelligence and cellphones have made it easier for students to cheat -- and even harder for others to spot, Gordin wrote. Despite the changes to the policy, Princeton will still require students to state: "I pledge my honor that I have not violated the Honor Code during this examination," according to the Journal.

Students are also more reluctant to report cheating, according to the policy proposal. Students are more likely now to anonymously report cheating due to fears of "doxxing or shaming among their peer groups" online, the proposal says, according to the school newspaper. Under the new guidelines, instructors will be present during exams to act "as a witness to what happens," but are instructed not to interfere with students. If a suspected honor code infraction occurs, they will report it to a student-run honor committee for adjudication.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Tweede halve finale Songfestival zonder protest verlopen, onder meer Roemenië, Denemarken en Noorwegen door naar finale

Vijftien landen traden donderdagavond aan in Wenen voor de tweede halve finale van het Songfestival. Er werd over een glazen kooi gekropen, het ging over ‘verstik me’ – en er was een ongemakkelijk filmpje over lhbtiq+-artiesten.

Colossal

The best of art, craft, and visual culture since 2010.

Mirei Monticelli’s Hand-Woven Banana Leaf Lamps Swell Between Material and Movement

Mirei Monticelli’s Hand-Woven Banana Leaf Lamps Swell Between Material and Movement

Milan-based Filipina designer Mirei Monticelli creates biomorphic lighting fixtures that toe the line between sculpture and utility. Undulating outward and glowing from within, the artist’s works feel as if they are alive, quietly dancing wherever they stand or hang.

These gestural, biodegradable structures are crafted with hand-woven Banaca fabric made from Abacá, a fiber that grows abundantly in Monticelli’s native Philippines. The artist’s studio works directly with a community of weavers in the Bicol province at the southeastern end of Luzon, sharing with Colossal, “We’ve developed the material together over time, so it’s not just sourcing, but a relationship.”

A dynamic sculptural lamp by Mirei Monticelli with light glowing through sheer textiles in hues of cream, green, and indigo

The laborious act of harvesting Abacá fiber has long been communal. From gathering the wild plant’s towering stalks and stripping them layer by layer to sun-drying bundles of knotted thread and hand-weaving the strands into functional textiles, the necessity of human connection has always been part of the process.

The term Banaca—coined by Monticelli—combines modern elements of design with a heritage technique that has been passed down for centuries. Monticelli’s contemporary subversion of a material so deeply engrained within Philippine culture further emphasizes the works’ metamorphic and dynamic presence. “Human rhythm is what gives the material its character, and it’s also why every piece feels alive when it’s lit,” says the artist.

Monticelli’s practice also incoporates techniques that echo garment construction and fashion. The artist shared that many of her methods are also learned from her mother, a fashion designer. Draping, volume-building, and creating shape are present in Monticelli’s lamps, underscoring a bodily essence within their surging forms.

Last month, the artist unveiled an installation titled “Pleasure Garden” at Milan Design Week, and often collaborates with interior designers, hospitality partners, and architectural studios to create immersive spaces. Find more from Monticelli on Instagram.

Three dynamic sculptural lamps by Mirei Monticelli with light glowing through sheer textiles in a cream hue
An installation of dynamic sculptural lamps by Mirei Monticelli. Light glows through sheer textiles in hues of cream, indigo. and purple
Photo by Juan Padilla
A dynamic sculptural lamp by Mirei Monticelli with light glowing through sheer textiles in cream hues
Photo by Juan Padilla
A dynamic sculptural lamp by Mirei Monticelli with light glowing through sheer textiles in hues of cream, green, and blue
An installation of dynamic sculptural lamps by Mirei Monticelli. Light glows through sheer textiles in a cream hue
Photo by Juan Padilla
Detail of an installation of dynamic sculptural lamps by Mirei Monticelli. Light glows through sheer textiles in a cream hue
Photo by Juan Padilla
A dynamic sculptural lamp by Mirei Monticelli with light glowing through sheer textiles in hues of cream and lilac
A dynamic sculptural lamp by Mirei Monticelli with light glowing through sheer textiles in a cream hue

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $7 per month. The article Mirei Monticelli’s Hand-Woven Banana Leaf Lamps Swell Between Material and Movement appeared first on Colossal.

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Noodverordening deel Stadskanaal na uitkomen mishandelingszaak

STADSKANAAL (ANP) - In een deel van het Groningse Stadskanaal is donderdagavond een noodverordening ingesteld. In het gebied staan "woningen die betrokken zijn bij een strafrechtelijk onderzoek", meldt de gemeente. Een groep mensen heeft donderdag ruiten ingegooid bij die woningen.

Ook gaan er volgens de gemeente op sociale media oproepen rond om de openbare orde nog verder te verstoren, waarbij mogelijk "brandversnellende middelen" zullen worden gebruikt.

Om verdere escalatie te voorkomen heeft burgemeester Klaas Sloots besloten tot een noodverordening in het gebied dat wordt omsloten door de Hoofdkade, Julianastraat, Stationslaan en Brugkade. Het beslaat het grootste deel van de wijk Parkwijk, die tegen de grens met Drenthe ligt. De maatregel geldt tot zondagavond 23.59 uur.

Mishandeling

Donderdag werd bekend dat twee vrouwen van 31 en 33 uit Stadskanaal worden verdacht van ernstige mishandeling van hun twee kinderen van 6 en 7 jaar. Sinds dat naar buiten is gekomen, is het onrustig in de Groningse gemeente en zijn er ruiten ingegooid bij de woningen die vermoedelijk van de vrouwen zijn.

Wie niets te zoeken heeft in het noodverordeningsgebied mag er niet komen. Ook groepen van drie of meer personen zijn er niet toegestaan. In het gebied is een hele lijst van voorwerpen verboden: "stokken, stenen, knuppels, boksbeugels, brandversnellende middelen, vuurwerk en (steek)wapens", aldus de noodverordening.