We want to live in Quentin Belt’s New York
What started as a blog documenting NYC’s party scene has turned into a decades-plus career of shooting the likes of Chloë Sevigny and Paloma Elsesser.
What started as a blog documenting NYC’s party scene has turned into a decades-plus career of shooting the likes of Chloë Sevigny and Paloma Elsesser.
The actor and writer has come a long way from home brewing stinky beer to impress her uni mates. Now, she’s in Benito Skinner’s new TV show Overcompensating, essentially playing a younger version of herself. It’s well worth a watch.
The prolific comedian self-published Running the Light in 2020 to critical acclaim (and some derision). Ahead of its re-release, author Megan Nolan speaks to Tallent about Irish humour, bad gigs and annoying Louis C.K.
The comedian’s new show, Overcompensating, is a beer-chugging, fist-bumping romp through college. We asked its creator about becoming a Kardashian, bro culture and why sparkling water makes him giddy.
Since 2018, the Instagram account has been a treasure trove of Cool Britannia gold. We meet the man behind the mood board for a look at his favourite summer shots.
The Project revives work written by queer authors who were lost during the AIDS crisis. The latest, Colm Ó Clúbhán’s Reasons for Staying, is a masterwork of outsider theatre.
In compiling the work of 70 Irish photographers from 1975 to the present day, Belfast-based creatives Lucy Jackson and Joel Seawright shine a light on Irish culture beyond the Troubles.
Puritanical online discourse about shagging on-screen is rife. And it's boring. Revolutionary Desires, a curious, incisive new book by critic and journalist Xuanlin Tham, is the perfect antidote.
The Liverpool-raised actor tells us about making BBC mob drama This City Is Ours – a tale of missing coke, car chases, shoot outs and… line-dancing.
New exhibition Blue Roan is a trip down the rabbit hole of 15 years of meditative, painstaking work. It was worth it.
Overdue collab alert! Stepping outside the fashion arena, the creatives find common ground in madcap aesthetics and their mums just not getting it.
In Ryan Coogler’s box-office juggernaut, the Derbyshire actor goes toe-to-toe and teeth-to-teeth with Michael B. Jordan – both of him.
Stepney Western merges traditional American movie tropes with documentary-style storytelling.
There are countless horror films to sink your teeth into but new Ryan Coogler joint, Sinners, which just enjoyed a huge opening weekend, is ripe for the picking.
The London exhibition features works by Jasleen Kaur, Corbin Shaw and Roman Manfredi.
Charli hosted the only afterparty worth its salt after her set last weekend. Timotheé Chalamet, PinkPantheress, The Dare, Clairo and Leonardo DiCaprio were just some of the celebs in attendance.
The artist has hand-painted the giant egg to raise money for the Independent Food Aid Network.
He’s the much-loved, much-bearded figure of Great British art. A new Paris exhibition will show you why.
As a Barbican retrospective celebrates the artist’s extraordinary career, we caught up with his wife Karon to hear about her fondest memories of her husband, with whom she founded LA's Underground Museum.
The renowned North Yorkshire choreographer’s latest double bill opens at the Southbank Centre this week. With themes of nightmarish nursery rhymes, a miscarriage and love, Phantom and A Wound With Teeth are packed with heart-wrenching stuff.
It’s a big week for the writer, artist and filmmaker: there’s a retrospective of his work on at the Tate Britain, and he’s got a new book out, Flower. In both, he asks himself – and the audience – big questions about modern life.
An age gap thriller, zombies, lustful deceit in the south of France, CEO aliens and Chloë Sevigny x 2, all for your viewing pleasure.
The exceptionally private artist’s show is an acerbic call to action, highlighting with gruesome detail how the UK drill scene was destroyed as quickly as it was built.