Curious about
their work,
not the moment.
Leila Antakly has spent over twenty years in conversation with artists, musicians, designers, filmmakers, and thinkers all over the world who are making work that matters. These are the conversations.
Interviews from the Archive
Explore all our conversations
Food Art Is Not a Trend
There is a moment, if you have ever stood in front of Laila Gohar's work, when you forget entirely that what you are looking at was made to be eaten. But the story of food art is older, stranger, and far more serious than any single moment of cultural virality can contain. From Roman frescoes to Daniel Spoerri's Eat Art movement to butter sculpted into fragments recalling ancient Greek marble — food has always been a carrier of meaning. Labor and land, culture and class, memory and desire, compressed into something you hold in your hand. This is a cultural essay about what happens when the most basic human material asks the questions the cameras do not know how to frame.
THE CULINARY DESIGNER JULIE ROTHHAHN
In her world, food becomes a material that can be modelled — to which a meaning can be given. Julie Rothhahn does not start with a recipe. She starts with an image impulse, an association of ideas, a question about form. Her studio works with brands and companies on experiences, installations, performances, and immersive dinners. She co-coordinates the Master's in Design & Culinary at the Reims School of Art. A dish, in her view, is first a thought.
CHEF AND CO-FOUNDER OF LIVINGSTON MARSEILLE VALENTIN RAFFALI
Born in the South of France. Cooked his way through New York. Came back to Marseille and set it on fire — literally. Valentin Raffali changes his menu every week, works over flame and charcoal, and has been cooking since he was fourteen years old. He was named Best French Wine Bar by Le Fooding in 2022. He says what he does is radical, and that he does not cook for people. He means both of those things entirely.
Charlotte Collard In Her Kitchen
One of the first interviews ever published on this site was with Charlotte Collard — international model, always traveling, always exploring. It became one of the most-read pieces and stayed that way. Years later, she is a mother of three, based in Brussels, and has built something entirely her own at the intersection of food, fashion, and the feed. She calls it a self-portrait. Her heart said: cooking, giving, sharing. Her brain said: twenty years in fashion is not something you leave behind. She found a way to hold both.
SHE'LL TAKE YOU TO THE FLOUR SHOP
She left fashion, opened Flour Shop, and the Wu-Tang Clan found her on Instagram. Brooklyn cake extraordinaire Amirah Kassem — Bon Appétit cover, 2017's most viral Instagram cake, Williams-Sonoma collab, and ice cream for breakfast in a Disney-themed kitchen — is still the most fun person in any room.
“Visibility has never been our measure of significance. We seek out artists and inspiring individuals whose work sparks curiosity, challenges assumptions, and leaves a lasting impression.”