
Columns
London Cult. publishes author and feature columns by interesting and intelligent people, fascinating storytellers and experts in their niches.
It’s worth reflecting on neural networks, games, transhumanism, and the other realities of the future—preferably before they decide everything for us. Journalist, writer, and ardent admirer of what lies ahead, Guy Seregin writes about the digital world with irony, occasional seriousness, and always to the point.
Theatre scholar Ana Tomskaya delights in frequenting London’s theatres, observing its theatrical life with care and affection, and sharing her impressions and observations. Her column is devoted to premieres, stage stars, and repertory that truly merits attention.
Self-discovery, personal boundaries, transformation through everyday experience – these are the themes explored by Alexander Sukhochev, writer and journalist, author of the book “Goa Syndrome”, in which the experience of living on the coast of India becomes an occasion for reflection on inner freedom and cultural transitions. His texts are an attempt to capture the movement of thought in the moment, without declarations, but with attention to detail.
Anastasia Semenovich is an art historian and journalist; she looks at art and writes about it. She does not separate contemporary art from art as a whole, and considers the early modern period to be the most compelling. She believes in the situational nature of artistic affinities, and in the idea that considered impressions are an essential tool for analysing a work of art—whether a painting, a performance, or something else entirely.



