




147 products
Ubikwist – Issue 11
Regular price SFr. 23.00 Save SFr. -23.00Ubikwist Issue 11- Expose Issue-Press Release
Guest Editor: Euzhan Palcy
After 10 issues and a global pandemic that altered the world, we’ve managed to launch a brand new issue – Expose. This latest edition of Ubikwist assembles a wide variety of activists, cultural luminaries, and artists from fashion, film, art and music, chronicling their respective journeys, heartfelt art forms, and 2020 in their own words. Amidst a health crisis, we adhered to mandatory safety precautions in conducting our interviews, capturing the beautiful images found in these pages. We had the pleasure to collaborate with the trailblazer, director, producer Euzhan Palcy as our first guest editor.
The first year of the decade exposed us to a wide variety of events: a country more deeply divided continuous merciless police killings of Black people, Black America’s rally cry for egalitarianism, a tumultuous political climate, and the implications of COVID-19. The conversation is shifting and we feel a sense of responsibility and obligation to not only contribute to the dialogue but initiate a deeper analysis of it. The fascinating paradox of art lies in its ability to alert our moral conscience while serving as a medium of escapism. Expose perfectly embodies that.
Professor Angela Davis and Kendrick Sampson lead the dialogue on civil disobedience, the new America, and what’s next. Talent giants Euzhan Palcy, Ruth Carter, Andrew Dosunmu open up about how they overcame obstacles along the way. Atlanta-based artist Codi Maddox is unfiltered in her disdain for gentrification and the systemic racism that is sweeping our big cities. Fashion’s newest it-girl Angeer Amol shares how TikTok landed her on the glossy pages of fashion. Other prominent features include Art Comes First, Assa Traoré, Baroness Valerie Amos, Gianni Lee, Mathieu Bitton, Mounia Orosemane, Danny Lyon, and Sean Waltrous. Rainbow Blonde Records, an independent label by artists, for artists is compelling in their unwavering belief in why art comes first. What makes this version of Ubikwist a particularly special one is how we’ve combined a broad range of ideas and works into a powerful message – that our experiences matter.
With every issue, we strive to capture the cultural climate of what’s relevant and necessary. Expose highlights 2020 in a unique way that intertwines dynamic art forms, triumphs, truth, and the profound personal stories of people. To produce this issue has been very challenging work, and we hope you are inspired by the diverse representations, collaborations, and activism as we look into the new year.
Frankie – Issue 98
Regular price SFr. 19.00 Save SFr. -19.00need some good news? how about this: issue 98 is officially on sale! it’s winging its way around australia (and beyond), with lots of wonderful stuff tucked away inside. some examples: a lady who’s started a doomsday collection of bread tags. a book club devoted to first nations stories. some old-fashioned insults that are due for a comeback (you slugabed!). a cosy home built inside a former yellow school bus. there are also puzzles to keep your mind chugging along, facts about some of our favourite native birds, and a few nifty – and natural – ways to make your house smell nice. we talk boobs in all their droopy, sensitive, meal-making glory, meet a wellington drag king with an important message, and consider the life lessons that come from learning to ride a motorbike. oh, and just a little thing: you’ll finally meet the winners of the 2020 good stuff awards! they’re a mighty fine bunch, if we do say so ourselves, and we can’t wait for you to get to know them.
Numéro Homme Berlin – Issue 13
Regular price SFr. 17.00 Save SFr. -17.00Numéro Homme Berlin #13
16 different covers. Covers ship randomly.
Weight: 3.8 kg
Numéro Berlin ist die Plattform und Spiegel eines neuen deutschen Stils und einer ambitionierten kreativen Generation, die Kunst, Kultur und Mode neu denkt und gestaltet. Diese wollen wir in all ihren Formen national und international transportieren. Indem Numéro die Kraft des Bildes und der Worte zusammenfügt, erschafft das Magazin eine neue Sprache – inszeniert von den talentiertesten und besten Autoren und Fotografen der Welt.
Ansinth – Issue 5
Regular price SFr. 21.00 Save SFr. -21.00ANSINTH celebrates visual experimentation. It is raw, visceral, subversive, fashion-forward, bold and unafraid.
ANSINTH is bi-annual, featuring a mix of men’s and women’s fashion. The magazine works with photographers, stylists and designers who are pushing fashion and photography forward; it is a highly-covetable, collectable and thick, thread-sewn, book-like object.
Wonderland – Winter 20
Regular price SFr. 22.00 Save SFr. -22.00System – Issue 16
Regular price SFr. 32.00 Save SFr. -32.00Ibrahim Kamara and Rafael Pavarotti
Photographed by Juergen Teller.
Over the past 18 months, stylist Ibrahim Kamara and photographer Rafael Pavarotti have emerged as a potent new force in fashion image-making. The duo are interviewed and present their latest work in a brand new 82-page fashion portfolio entitled ‘Your dreams are my dreams’, styled by Kamara and photographed by Pavarotti.
Also in System’s 300+ page issue:
Thebe Magugu in conversation with curator Hans Ulrich Obrist, in which the Johannesburg-based designer and 2019’s LVMH Prize winner reflects on how he uses fashion both to celebrate and interrogate the rich history of his homeland, South Africa. With photographs by Tim Elkaïm and styling by Agata Belcen.
Photographer Mark Lebon transformed a garage in 1980s London into a creative playground known as Crunch and became the catalyst for a sprawling countercultural scene that continues to influence fashion today. System explores the people and legacy of Crunch, while presenting a new portfolio of work focused on a fashion story collaboration between Lebon and stylist Amanda Harlech. With contributions and recollections from the likes of John Galliano, Nick Knight, Kim Jones, Mario Sorrenti, Jean-Baptiste Mondino, Glen Luchford, Tyrone Lebon, and many more.
Performance artist Vinson Fraley, Jr. and photographer Mario Sorrenti collaborate on a statement-making portfolio and conversation that leans beyond choreography and into abstraction, featuring the underwear of menswear designer Ludovic de Saint Sernin.
Fashion historian Olivier Saillard meets Paris couture’s discreet radical Adeline André, with photographs by Maxime Imbert and styling by Camille Bidault-Waddington.
Plus, Hung Huang on how post-lockdown shopping in China is keeping the industry afloat; Mahmoud ‘Mo’ Mfinanga on how today’s most important photographers are those who have been silenced; and Mohamed Megdoul on why gaming holds the future for fashion. And Bryanboy answers his bespoke ‘Shopping Questionnaire’ by Loïc Prigent.
System Issue 16 is accompanied by an exclusive 70-page Coach supplement, exploring the American brand’s recent collaboration with Juergen Teller featuring the 16-strong ‘Coach family’ including Kaia Gerber and Hari Nef in New York, Kate Moss and Lexi Boling in London, and Xiao Wen Ju in Shanghai, to name a few. Accompanied by Juergen Teller and Coach’s creative director Stuart Vevers in conversation.
System explores with style and substance the dialogues at the heart of the global fashion industry.
Its biannual magazine offers exclusive long-format conversations with fashion’s most relevant, most powerful and most opinionated individuals, accompanied by portfolios created by the industry’s most in-demand image-makers.
Exploring and commenting on fashion’s constantly shifting landscape, System is a platform for deep thoughts and real opinions – shared within the industry and, in turn, influencing the broader world.
V Magazine – Issue 127
Regular price SFr. 20.00 Save SFr. -20.00V Strong!
"The Thought Leaders" Issue
We can't guarantee for a certain cover.
Konfekt – Issue 1
Regular price SFr. 15.00 Save SFr. -15.00032c – Issue 38
Regular price SFr. 22.00 Save SFr. -22.00SUPREME founder James Jebbia called 032c "the last truly great culture magazine." In 032c Issue #38, we celebrate our first two decades with a 28-page fold-out chronicling our evolution from DIY Berlin to the world of ready-to-wear, featuring commentary and a timeline of global 21st century cultural production by tech and media arbiter NEW MODELS, a visual audit by VIRGIL ABLOH, and a message from ANNA WINTOUR. Gemini legend and 2020 chart-slayer GUNNA incarnates rap's mythological hero of the year. MAHFUZ SULTAN and ARI MARCOPOULOS unearth MICHAEL HEIZER's secret desert sanctum. ROB HARDY, cinematographer of the "inexorable" behind the visual landscapes of Ex Machina, Annihilation, and Devs, shows SHUMON BASAR what the future looks like now. A newly repatriated, chain-smoking DAVID HOCKNEY gives dubious health advice to SVEN MICHAELSEN – then SVEN MICHAELSEN heads for the (Waldhaus) Sils to learn hospitality from hotel maestro URS KIENBERGER. Theories of automation, labor, and the self take an intimate turn when MCKENZIE WARK Zooms SUSAN BENNETT, the original voice of Siri. At Bottega Veneta, DANIEL LEE bears all – and flourishes. ADRIANO SACK talks Kraftwerk, Kippenberger, and West Berlin with CLAUDIA SKODA, fashion's unsung knitwear queen. Photo-based artist DEANA LAWSON shares images that once evaded public view, having landed instead on her cutting room floor. "Slowed and Throwed" icon DJ SCREW proves magnificent and immortal – in Houston, and around the globe. JACK SELF tours MATTHEW M. WILLIAMS' new abode: the house of Givenchy. Diamond-bejeweled Italian stream-screen sensation ALICE PAGANI leads LUKAS WASSMANN through an art-rich Roman Palazzo. Leading light of NY theater JEREMY O.HARRIS holds the stage at a mannerist Schloss in Austria for a BRUNO STAUB and MARC GOEHRINGproduction. Elsewhere on the old continent, HUGO COMTE casts KRIS GRIKAITE in a Parisian roman-à-clef.
Plus: Société de 032c presents PROGNOSTIQUE DES TEMPS MODERNES with pop star Dua Lipa, menswear bromatics Jerry Lorenzo and Alessandro Sartori, artworld emulsifier Aria Dean, man in Milan Francesco Vezzoli, Twitter nihilist Nolen Gertz, distiller Max Luz, and musical futurist Gaika. At last, as ever, we turn the pages of our favorite books of the season in a new installment of BERLIN REVIEW.
Buffalo Zine – Issue 12
Regular price SFr. 28.00 Save SFr. -28.00In 1993, Buffalo Zine’s Arts Editor-at-Large Hans Ulrich Obrist, sat down with artists Christian Boltanski and Bertrand Lazier at Café Select in Paris, where they began discussing an imaginary exhibition. Titled ‘Do It’, the exhibition would be built through sets of instructions given by contemporary artists, and freely available for anyone to interpret.
A few years later, after this new exhibition model had travelled the globe and the list of contributors had expanded, it became a book, titled ‘Do It’: a public how-to guide for creating art that was part manual, part creative cookbook, and part do-it-yourself kit.
Under the restrictions and limitations imposed by the circumstances of the past months, the spirit of the ‘Do It’ project has never felt more relevant. So for this issue of Buffalo, Hans Ulrich asked six artists to give us an instructions each that we have followed in the making of the magazine:
1. Avoid the straight line (Caroline Polachek)
2. Try the same idea in different ways(Shayne Oliver aka Leech)
3. Use only one typeface: Univers Black(Matthew M. Williams)
4. Do it through the lens of your best friend(FKA Twigs)
5. And as if nobody was going to buy the magazine (Miranda July)
6. Tell the truth. And a little lie. (Philippe Parreno)
We hope you enjoy the way Buffalo does it
Rollacoaster – AW20
Regular price SFr. 19.00 Save SFr. -19.00Rollacoaster Magazine Autumn/ Winter 2020
LILI REINHART Covers: Rollacoaster Magazine Autumn/ Winter 2020
“I think we all as human beings make mistakes. It’s just that when you have eyes on you, your mistakes become public and people comment on them, and that’s horrifying, it really sucks.”
Actress Lili Reinhart is tired of the misconceptions and wrongly painted narratives. From the trolls on social media to those who scrutinise her every step, the Riverdale star is well and truly over it. Releasing her executively produced film Chemical Hearts exclusively through Amazon Prime today - August 21st, 2020, the actress gets candid on producing for the first time, the negative side of fame and her highly anticipated debut poetry book, Swimming Lesson.
SABRINA CARPENTER Covers: Rollacoaster Magazine Autumn/ Winter 2020
From the Broadway stage to the silver screen, quadruple threat Sabrina Carpenter is well on her way to world domination. The Hate U Give actress has been moving at 100 Mph since her breakout role in the Disney Chanel reboot of the noughties classic Girl Meets World, as the sassy best friend Maya Hart. The multi-faceted singer and actress has gone on to release her pop-folk debut album Eyes Wide Open and star opposite comedian Liza Koshy in the Alicia Key’s produced dance-flick Work It.
Ready for the next chapter and excited for life after quarantine, Sabrina talks her transition from being a Disney star to taking on more serious role, navigating social media and all the new music she is about to bless us with.
Dazed – Autumn/Winter 2020
Regular price SFr. 19.00 Save SFr. -19.00Dazed Autumn/Winter 2020
After a year of seismic social, cultural and political change, the new issue of Dazed brings truth-telling figures together to ask, ‘What will the future look like?’ These voices remind us, amid the still-unfolding madness of 2020, that “your art and your words have the power to build and tear down worlds of your own making”.
On the covers, Letitia Wright reflects on the threads that bind Black British protest’s past, present and future with her searing turn in Steve McQueen’s new drama Mangrove. Persona-switching rapper Shygirl imagines new mutant fantasias for nightlife in the UK and beyond, and hip-hop wunderkind Pa Salieu digs deep to find hope with his gritty and playful dispatches from Coventry’s sonic frontlines. Finally, Chinese-Canadian actor and singer Kris Wu lights the way as Louis Vuitton’s new muse.
When the world has become so hard to predict, it might seem like a strange time to be thinking about prophecies. But, as the poet said to the fashion designer in the pages of this issue, “To be an artist is to be a soothsayer, to be someone who can look into the future, and is building for that. And I think that’s what we do.”
THE COVERS
LETITIA WRIGHT: “If you wait for other people to tell your story, it will never be told.” Powerfully lensed by Arnaud Lajeunie, the Black Panther star takes charge in Steve McQueen’s timely retelling of a watershed moment in British history
PA SALIEU: “This generation ain’t no joke.” The Midlands rapper lifting British hip hop to a new plane, lensed by Gabriel Moses and styled by Raphael Hirsch in one of Shaun Leane’s iconic pieces for Alexander McQueen
SHYGIRL: Slashing her way through the insanity of 2020, the shapeshifting rapper goes in for the kill with photographer Jordan Hemingway and stylist Nell Kalonji
KRIS WU: Is it all over my face? The Chinese-Canadian actor, musician and Vuitton muse sees the future writ large with photographer Yu Cong
THE FEATURES
VIRGIL ABLOH IN CONVERSATION WITH CALEB FEMI: The Vuitton prodigy and the London poet muse on the power of the Black imagination
PHOEBE BRIDGERS: Creepin’ round the neighbourhood with LA’s dark princess of dysfunction, as lensed by Clara Balzary
BLACK BLOSSOMS: In search of a decolonised future for the arts, with Black Blossoms School of Art and Culture founder Bolanle Tajudeen and friends
NYEGE NYEGE TAPES: Sonic boom! The Kampala label restlessly reshaping club culture across the African continent
CONFUSED NEWS: Retraining in cyber? New dispatches from the robot-wars frontier – plus, a soundtrack from London ear-shredder
Never Worse
ZANELE MUHOLI: Sharing images from their Brave Beauties project, the South African artist makes the case for photography as a form of activism
SALEM: Into the maelstrom with the witch-house prodigal sons, returned to us after a decade of silence
HILTON ALS: The writer and critic curates a special literary section of the poems and stories that have shaped him
ROSÉ: The BLACKPINK singer bringing rawness and realness to the K-pop machine
ONE FUTURE: For a special collaboration with CK One, young imagemakers from across the US consider life and legacies amid the tumult of 2020
In 1991, Jefferson Hack and Rankin launched Dazed & Confused as an alternative style and culture magazine. The title became a lightning rod for cultural provocation and the magazine became a movement, growing into the agenda-setting publishing powerhouse Dazed Media.
Today, Dazed magazine continues to champion radical fashion and youth culture, defining the times with a vanguard of next generation writers, stylists and image makers.
Dazed's online platform dazeddigital.com, where pop culture meets the underground, reaches an ever-growing and loyal community of global tastemakers.
Dazed is the most influential independent fashion and culture title in the world
Crash – Issue 92
Regular price SFr. 24.00 Save SFr. -24.00Violet – Issue 14
Regular price SFr. 18.00 Save SFr. -18.00Violet Issue 14
“So for us, how do you keep sane when everyone around you has gone mad? So the best thing I could do during this time was show up to the studio. With heavy heart. And a lot of anger. And for me, it was like, how do I pull out the beauty and the sort of, ascending quality that we all have within us during times of trauma and trial.”
—CASSI NAMODA, ARTIST
Pop – Issue 43
Regular price SFr. 22.00 Save SFr. -22.00Winter 2020/2021
A magazine for the generations of genuinely chic women and men who understand that fashion is a wonderful prism through which so much of contemporary creativity and cultural change is refracted. We’re living in a time of a new world order with fashion as a vibrant language. These are the days of POP.
Heroine – Issue 13
Regular price SFr. 19.00 Save SFr. -19.00The wonder of moving image – of shared experience and fantastical dreaming – have never been more relevant, or potent. Cinema may have moved temporarily to the small screen, but its stories, and storytellers, are more passionate than ever. For this issue of HEROINE we speak to some of the industry's defining voices about their visions for the future.
On the cover: DAKOTA FANNING
One of the most magnetic actors of a generation, Dakota Fanning has worked consistently since uprooting from Georgia at the age of five, and despite only turning 26-years-old this past February, has over 30 movies under her belt. For this issue the actor looks towards her third decade and how she can contribute to bringing untold stories to the screen with her production company, and is in conversation with Golden Globe-winner Kate Hudson and shot by Danielle Levitt, with fashion by Christian Stroble.
Also in this issue:
“What set the brilliant performances apart from the very good ones is that wholeness of a human being,” says Andrea Riseborough, whose roles have increasingly allowed her space to mine the depths of human thought and behaviour. For this issue, Riseborough is shot by long-time friend and HEROINE contributor Niall O'Brien.
Rachel Morrison was the first female cinematographer to receive an Academy Award nomination ("Why there are so few is entirely illogical"). Her work on Black Panther carved an aesthetic like no other; Morrison answers 100 questions about her career, and improving the gender imbalance in the industry.
Cultural chameleon Michele Lamy's band LAVASCAR combines spoken word with elemental drum loops. For this issue the three members of the band talk about curating inspiration from poetry and primordial rhythms.
Julien Dossena conjured Paco Rabanne Fall/Winter 2020 from ideas of power, sisterhood and forces of the unknown. We interview the designer about the collection: a celebration of unity and uniquely female strength.
As actor Myha'la Herrold’s new HBO show Industry hits screens, she talks to us about navigating new experiences while maintaining a voice that promotes visibility, community and representation, and is shot for the issue by Michael Avedon.
Olivia Cooke has swerved conventional pathways for lived experience, portraying almost a decade’s worth of characters by the age of 26, whether lusting after Norman Bates as wide-eyed Emma Decody in Bates Motel, or gallivanting through a virtual universe in Steven Spielberg’s Ready Player One. For this issue she is in conversation with friend and fellow actor Paapa Esidou (who joined the Royal Shakespeare Company in 2012 and received rave reviews for 2020’s BBC series I May Destroy You).
When Parasite became the first foreign-language film to win Best Picture at this year’s Oscars, it not only marked a crowning moment for South Korea’s film industry, but a long-overdue recognition of East Asian cinema’s rich and dynamic history. HEROINE features editor Finn Blythe takes a deep-dive into the complex and varied past of East Asian Cinema, in Shattered Dreams and New Beginnings.
Plus: Legendary photographer Ari Marcopoulos' latest installment of CHAOS, a unique zine collaboration only found in the pages of HEROINE, Mark Seliger and Paul Sinclaire's black and white portrait series with iconic model Erika Linder, Dan Beleiu and Dogukan Nesanir's Trek, Fabien Montique and Erik Raynal's Litay and Thomas Cooksey and Inês Bizzaro's Joy Ride.
The Skirt Chronicles – Issue 7
Regular price SFr. 21.00 Save SFr. -21.00We all know where we’ve been: in a desert full of desserts. Volume VII was made remotely, in between protests, zoom calls, and spilled tears. Sit down with us as we reflect on our world suddenly filled with absence, one giant Dali-esque melting clock, and see whether or not we will mention the day the world broke.
We’re cooking for four, five, six people. Making what? A cake from a dreaming woman. Before riding on Anne France’s motorcycle, watch out for red diamondbacks and Picasso the dog. I can feel a change coming, an intimacy that can't be faked. We don’t live in a country, we live in a language.
Choose between hugging your friends, climbing in the trees, pretending to be a statue, or grapefruit and cabbage. We couldn’t so Volume VII has four covers.
The Skirt Chronicles is a Paris-based publication by Sarah de Mavaleix, Sofia Nebiolo and Haydée Touitou that was launched in March 2017 at Librairie Yvon Lambert in Paris. Granting the same importance to photography as it does to the written word, The Skirt Chronicles is a title exploring literature, fashion, culture and beyond.
In 2018, The Skirt Chronicles won the Editor of the Year prize at the Stack Awards in London where the judges defined the magazine as “fresh, classy, surprising, and emotional”.This collaborative platform is proud to include talented individuals however young or old their souls might be: Graphic Designers C’estainsi, Copy Editor Natalie Cenci, Joana Avillez, Marc Beaugé, Gauthier Borsarello, Jorge de Cascante, Marie Déhé, Tim Elkaim, Gillian Garcia, Katerina Jebb, Marion Jolivet, Alexandre Khondji, Rob Kulisek, Brigitte Lacombe, Inès Longevial, Justin Morin, Yelena Moskovich, Iris de Moüy, Albert Moya, Umar Nadeem, Christopher Niquet, Luna Paiva, Hugo Partouche, Ryoko Sekiguchi, Julia Sherman, Ida Skovmand, Andrea Sportono, Shin Okishima, Dan Thawley, Camille Vivier, Saskia Vogel, Emily Wells, Robbie Whitehead and many others who will be featured in upcoming volumes.
Double – Issue 40
Regular price SFr. 22.00 Save SFr. -22.00"What I really like about Double magazine is the way this magazine deals with what it really loves, not only about the last news or last trends but mixing with news from the past. I mean we always try to mix energy that cannot disappear according to us and that could fit with the most relevant from today. An example? Never forget Paddy McAloon when you want to talk about pop music in England today ; never forget the designer Bob Mackie when you want to talk about the spectacular way of shows today. " – Fabrice Paineau
Self Service – Issue 53
Regular price SFr. 37.00 Save SFr. -37.00Self Service is French style for international filles and garcons. Stylish to the extreme, this coffee-table-worthy mag is packed to its spine with a mix of gloss and matte pages featuring fashion’s biggest names and most exciting designs. This is a title to delve into, to ponder, to come back to and read again. Cool, classy and bold, this is a title for lovers of the European Vogues, Purple and Fantastic Man.
Yolo Journal – Issue 5
Regular price SFr. 24.00 Save SFr. -24.00
We call our Fall/Winter 2020 issue the Dream Issue, because when we were putting it together, we discovered that so many of our contributors were writing about places that makes them dream (Tangier and Oahu), places they dreamed of when they couldn’t travel (Amalfi, Biarritz, Goldeneye), or places that had always been a dream until they made it a reality (Botswana, Joshua Tree, Namibia). There are also great stories from Barbados, a secret island in New England, and many more!
Twin – Issue 23
Regular price SFr. 25.00 Save SFr. -25.002020 hasn’t given us much to laugh about, but it has changed our experience of time and space. This year we’ve slowed down, ground to a halt, accelerated, activated, organised, experienced deep grief and pure joy all at once, sometimes at the same time. With a global pandemic keeping most people at home, we invited contributors to explore their surroundings, to work with what they had around them.
The result is Twin’s personal issue, and we’re honoured and excited to have been able to create such a rich, intimate, thought provoking magazine at this genuinely strange and largely unprecedented time (remember when that wasn’t the opening line to every single email...?) thanks to the independent, dynamic spirit of our contributors.
At 26 years old, Dilone is one of the leading models in fashion, and wields her influence powerfully. Our cover star model and activist explores the power of protest and community in an interview with Jordan Anderson. The brilliant Leah Thomas, founder of the Intersectional Environmentalism movement, drills into systemic racism within environmentalism. She explains why activism needs work across social justice and sustainability in order to make impactful change, with portraits by Nolwen Cifuentes. And in ‘Words and Pictures’ photographer Jermaine Francis and director Akinola Davies discuss Francis’ portraits of graffiti that were taken during lockdown in London and how they embody our political reality.
2020 is a time to celebrate radical visionaries, so in this issue you'll also find a rare interview with the iconic Californian pioneer of performance and print, Barbara T. Smith. Kate Neave profiles the inspirational installations of Dominique White. Also, Jess Clark talks to Byredo founder Ben Gorham and beauty maverick and artist IsamayaFfrench about future colour theory. Photographer Sharif Hamza captures moments of fleeting beauty, style icon TziporahSalamon, captured by Ben Rayner, offers a love letter to New York post- lockdown. At home, Lara Johnson-Wheeler delivers a love letter to romance and recipes, while in ‘Subversive Skin’, Isabella Davey profiles the new designers changing underwear.
And so much more! As winter looms, get up close & personal with this latest issue; be inspired and energised to face this brave new world we’re in.
Hunger – Issue 19
Regular price SFr. 19.00 Save SFr. -19.00For HUNGER’s 19th issue, we’re excited to announce a theme that we know resonates with these urgent times: DIY. So far this year, we’re in the midst of a pandemic and a recession, all while finally beginning to address the long-ignored realities of systemic racism. Dodging past crumbling systems and making change when no-one else will, a new wave of activists, punks and artists are claiming the future for their own – and we want to give them the credit they deserve.
Our DIY Issue is headed up by six talents who embody this radical spirit. Actor Malachi Kirby appears in frank conversation with close friend and Black Panther star Letitia Wright and Academy Award-winning director Steve McQueen ahead of the release of Small Axe, an anthology series based on the experiences of London’s West Indian community. Paapa Essiedu opens up about working on cult hit I May Destroy You. In an era where LGBQTIA+ rights are continuously under threat, pop star Kim Petras gets candid about growing up trans in rural Germany and the need to show up for her community, no matter what. Mercury Prize-nominated rapper and Top Boy star Little Simz talks about life after critically-acclaimed album Grey Area, the emotional lows of quarantine and finding new purpose. The last of our cover stars, genre-defying musician Bree Runway discusses online trolls, battling colourism and how therapy is teaching her to love herself. Debuting in October as a Digital Cover, Ziwe, the host of Instagram show Baited with Ziwe – where she speaks to guests such as Caroline Calloway and Alyssa Milano about race – talks to fellow comedian Athena Kugblenu about mixing education with entertainment. Our Art Section is guest-edited by Ghanaian-born, London-based multidisciplinary artist Harold Offeh, In the spirit of Audre Lorde, he spotlights three artists making their own tools to dismantle the Master’s House: filmmaker and flagmaker Tanoa Sasraku, moving image artist Michelle Williams Gamaker and multimedia artist Zadie Xa.
The DIY Issue’s Documentary Section hones in on themes of community, featuring a profile of photographer Callum Malcolm-Kelly, who highlights southeast London nightlife and culture, and an investigation into the commodification of arts education alongside a series of portraits of Central Saint Martins students. Away from the capital, Nathan Appleyard explores the lost teenage summer in the Yorkshire countryside and further afield, Mexican photographer Nelson Morales documents the third gender muxe community in Oaxaca. Closing the issue, our Speaker’s Corner Section features op-eds from the founder of The Free Black University Melz Owusu, model and In Their Shoes author Jamie Windust and Camden Youth MP Athian Akec.
Frankie – Issue 97
Regular price SFr. 19.00 Save SFr. -19.00looking for a little extra joy and inspiration? well, good news: frankie issue 97 is officially on sale in australia, and it’s got both those things by the bucketload. for instance, there’s a fellow making a zoo’s worth of creatures out of (biodegradable) balloons, and the world’s first professional hijabi ballerina. you’ll also find art inspired by nostalgic things like gameboys and old-school arcades, plus a whole bunch of tips to help you grow yummy tea at home. we talk fun products for pets, making gin, and setting up a makeshift darkroom in your house – that is, when we’re not ogling lovely clothing and throws. need more incentive? how about a tour of north korea from a local’s perspective, some lovely rainbow families, and a bunch of retro recipes to satisfy your sweet tooth? plus, there’s all the usual laughs and real-life tales, of course. hope you enjoy, frankie friends.
i-D – Issue 361
Regular price SFr. 21.00 Save SFr. -21.00i-D magazine's AW20 issue is a celebration of our 40th anniversary, a tribute to family, legacy and inclusivity, featuring cover stars who've defined i-D's past, present and future.
Over 37 years, i-D has carved its position as the premier source for fashion inspiration, and in 2012, joined the VICE Media family to expand VICE’s reach into digital fashion content. i-D has come a long way since its beginnings as a hand-stapled magazine and has developed into a leading video-driven platform, documenting fashion, music and contemporary culture from around the globe. i-D reaches an ambitious and creative audience, offering access to the most inspiring names in fashion and exploring everything from high-end couture to underground style scenes.
Wonderland – Autumn 20
Regular price SFr. 22.00 Save SFr. -22.00
Can't find the book you're looking for? Fill out the form bellow and we will order it for you. (Books only. But we are always happy for magazine recommandations.)