Although I’ve seen Kara Walker’s incomparable silhouette works many times – including in this very space at Berlin’s Sprüth Magers gallery – they immediately strike me, here, as distinct from her earlier practice….

Although I’ve seen Kara Walker’s incomparable silhouette works many times – including in this very space at Berlin’s Sprüth Magers gallery – they immediately strike me, here, as distinct from her earlier practice….

Punjab Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz Sharif has reaffirmed her government’s commitment to accelerating work on development projects and ensuring improved public service delivery across the province.
Talking to a delegation from Mianwali in…
Google is updating Search to allow users to ask follow-up questions directly from AI Overviews, the AI-generated summaries that appear at the top of some search results. The change lets users continue a query without starting a new search….

KARACHI: The devastating fire at Gul Plaza, one of Karachi’s worst fire tragedies, was accidentally ignited by a child, according to a final inquiry report prepared by the high-level committee.
The fire broke out at the Gul Plaza shopping…

The patient: A 34-year-old man in Mexico
The symptoms: Within seconds of drinking a “smoky” alcoholic beverage at a bar, the man felt an intense pain in his stomach.

Jannik Sinner is into his third successive Australian Open semifinal after beating American Ben Shelton 6-3 6-4 6-4 on Wednesday night to extend his Melbourne Park win streak to 19 matches.
MORE: All the scores from Day 11 at AO 2026
The Italian…

Read more news stories here
The Mithras Trio has announced the upcoming departure of two of its members, violinist Ionel Manciu and cellist Leo Popplewell, stating that they will be focusing instead on their orchestral careers. Pianist…

NEW YORK, January 28, 2026 ─ Marsh (NYSE: MRSH), a global leader in risk, reinsurance and capital, people and investments, and management consulting, today announced the launch of its global Digital Infrastructure Contract Advisory Group, designed to help clients manage and streamline strategic service contracts throughout the lifecycle of their digital infrastructure assets.
The digital infrastructure ecosystem—including data centers, fiber and wireless networks, AI/cloud platforms, and their service providers—relies on numerous contracts like service-level agreements and power purchase agreements, each with specific insurance and contractual risk-transfer terms. Given the scale of the operations and the evolving technologies they depend on, these contracts can be especially complex. Reviewing and managing them is not only time-consuming but, if not properly managed, can tie up processes and lead to significant financial, legal, and operational risks.
Marsh’s new Digital Infrastructure Contract Advisory Group eases this burden for clients. Comprised of former contract attorneys, risk managers, and insurance experts, the team delivers comprehensive contract review and negotiation support across the acquisition, construction, and operational phases of digital infrastructure assets. By aligning contractual language with insurance obligations, resolving coverage gaps, and securing best-in-class insurance for potential claims, the team enables clients to safeguard their balance sheets and unlock capital.
Commenting on the new group, Mike Mathews, Global Digital Infrastructure Leader, Marsh, said: “Contract reviews demand deep expertise, careful coordination, and significant time investment, making them a complex and often burdensome process for our digital infrastructure clients, many of whom do not have dedicated risk management teams to support the process.
“Our team of experienced contract specialists alleviates this burden for clients, delivering peace of mind while also enabling them to move at pace. It is the latest example of how Marsh is bringing industry-leading value and solutions to clients investing in this dynamic, rapidly evolving industry.”
Earlier this week, Marsh expanded its global Nimbus data center insurance facility dedicated to large-scale data center construction. The expansion doubles Nimbus’ capacity to $2.7 billion, inclusive of delay in start-up and business interruption coverage for major data center construction projects in the UK, US, Canada, Europe, Australia, and New Zealand.