Fashion, like medicine, is a bodily pursuit.
Revisting the refined aesthetics and startling content of the late Robert Mapplethorpe.
The colorful and maximalist design movement ushered in the 80s with a bang whose aesthetic reverberations are still being felt.
The Chinese celebrity and the entrepreneur speaks out on the power of Google translate, contemporary art, and Michael Jordan.
The author’s debut novel 'Surveys' takes on coming of age in the Internet-famous era.
Hong Kong photographer Wing Shya shares his work and private photographs from the sets of director Wong Kar Wai.
Surveying the digital age’s favorite architecture movement.
The artist Cali Thornhill Dewitt is an essential Los Angeles figure.
A new exhibition at London’s ICA captures the faces of Palace, the skate brand defying notions of high- and lowbrow.
The young painter opens up on the existential necessity and new possibilities of a move to the countryside.
Artist Jeremy Shaw on drugs, religion, and the power of altered states.
Artist Cyril Duval explores Times Square via Snapchat and a selfie stick.
The artist explains global nomadism and the power of non-style.
Intimidating and inspiring: we remember the 90s London boutique that changed how we experience stores today.
A conversation with Babak Radboy, an artist disguised as a creative director—or perhaps a creative director disguised as an artist.
A new generation of creative professionals talk about lives lived in constant motion.
To bring the year to a close, we’re taking a look back at the social media highlights of 2015: everything that our Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook communities shared, liked, commented on, and had hilarious things to say about.
We asked three creatives under 25 whose work we admire: what does authenticity mean to you?