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  • Printmaking skills of Manet, Van Gogh and more celebrated in Bath show Steven Morris
    Exhibition explores how artists mainly known for their paintings helped revive a skill that had fallen out of fashionThey may be best known for their vibrant oil paintings but an exhibition opening in the English West Country is focusing instead on the subtle printmaking skills of artists such as Édouard Manet, Vincent van Gogh and Paul Gauguin.More than 50 prints created mainly by impressionists, post-impressionists and cubists are going on display at the Holburne Museum in Bath. Continue readi
     

Printmaking skills of Manet, Van Gogh and more celebrated in Bath show

17 May 2026 at 15:00

Exhibition explores how artists mainly known for their paintings helped revive a skill that had fallen out of fashion

They may be best known for their vibrant oil paintings but an exhibition opening in the English West Country is focusing instead on the subtle printmaking skills of artists such as Édouard Manet, Vincent van Gogh and Paul Gauguin.

More than 50 prints created mainly by impressionists, post-impressionists and cubists are going on display at the Holburne Museum in Bath.

Continue reading...

© Photograph: Karen Robinson/The Guardian

© Photograph: Karen Robinson/The Guardian

© Photograph: Karen Robinson/The Guardian

Barge loading in HO scale 2718

Tangled Bank posted a photo:

Barge loading in HO scale 2718

The history of model railroading in an old magazine from the mid 2oth Century.

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  • What it actually takes for companies like OpenAI and SpaceX to go public
    NEW YORK, May 17 — Hundreds of companies raised a combined US$70 billion (RM280 billion) by selling shares to the public in the United States last year.But 2026 could shatter records, with rocket and AI company SpaceX, ChatGPT-maker OpenAI and AI startup Anthropic all potentially making their stock market debuts.So what exactly does it take for a company to “go public”? The process, known as an initial public offering or IPO, typically takes months or years and c
     

What it actually takes for companies like OpenAI and SpaceX to go public

17 May 2026 at 13:00

Malay Mail

NEW YORK, May 17 — Hundreds of companies raised a combined US$70 billion (RM280 billion) by selling shares to the public in the United States last year.

But 2026 could shatter records, with rocket and AI company SpaceX, ChatGPT-maker OpenAI and AI startup Anthropic all potentially making their stock market debuts.

So what exactly does it take for a company to “go public”? The process, known as an initial public offering or IPO, typically takes months or years and can cost millions of dollars.

Here is how it works:

Picking a stock exchange 

The first big decision is where to list.

In the US, two options dominate: the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) — the oldest and most famous, with its iconic trading floor in lower Manhattan — and the Nasdaq, a fully electronic exchange that is home to most of the biggest tech companies.

Together, they account for roughly half of the total value of all stocks traded worldwide.

Companies also have to pick a “ticker” — the short letter code that identifies their stock.

Some keep it simple (MSFT for Microsoft), while others get creative (DNUT for Krispy Kreme donuts, CAR for rental company Avis).

Hitting the road 

Before a company can sell shares to the public, it has to file a detailed document called an S-1 with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the US government agency that oversees financial markets, and Wall Street’s de facto referee.

The S-1 is essentially a deep dive into the company’s finances, business model and risks, designed to help ordinary investors make informed decisions.

As JPMorgan puts it, it has “the dual purpose of registering the securities with the SEC and educating investors on the opportunity.”

The SEC reviews the filing and can ask lots of questions.

“For an S-1 filing, that can sometimes go through several rounds of comments from staff, so it could take months,” SEC Chairman Paul Atkins said recently.

He added that the agency is working to speed things up.

SpaceX is expected to file its S-1 this week, according to a source close to the matter.

The pitch 

Once the paperwork is underway, company executives hit the road — literally. They travel city to city (and hop on video calls) in what is known as a “roadshow,” pitching their company to big institutional investors like pension funds and hedge funds, as well as everyday retail investors.

SpaceX is planning a special event for 1,500 individual investors in June, according to CNBC.

Not every company makes it through this stage. Fintech firm Clear Street pulled the plug on its IPO plans in February after failing to drum up enough interest, blaming market volatility.

Deciding on a price 

The trickiest part may be settling on a share price — the cost of one piece of ownership in the company when it first hits the market.

“Pricing an IPO is probably more art than science,” said Matthew Kenney, IPO specialist at Renaissance Capital.

Banks advising the company want to raise as much money as possible, but they also need to leave room for the stock to rise once trading begins — otherwise, no one will want to buy it.

“If you really seek to maximize the share price, you’re going to have very little aftermarket demand and the IPO can flop and nobody wants to be ringing the opening bell and see their stock price fall,” Kenney said.

Sometimes companies get it wrong and have to adjust.

Chip startup Cerebras revised its target price twice before finally going public at US$185 a share — then watched the stock soar 68 per cent on its very first day of trading. — AFP

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