Anyone seen Uncle Shortbread?
The London comedy troupe turning the mundane into nightmarish cinema, one laser-firing, dog-incinerating pope at a time.
The London comedy troupe turning the mundane into nightmarish cinema, one laser-firing, dog-incinerating pope at a time.
The Face speaks to the trusted in-house shooters for Cardi B, Dua Lipa, The 1975, Björk and Post Malone.
Six much-loved independents – DFA, Ninja Tune, Stones Throw, Jazzy Sport, Public Possession and Ghostly International – have their own episode on Carhartt WIP’s new series. Host Chal Ravens picks out three standout tunes from each.
These independent bookmakers are willing to take a risk on ambitious and innovative writing, in a bid to create future classics.
Dua gets a blockbuster club remix, Shenseea drops sultry dancehall and Miley Cyrus returns with a power pop banger.
As Nike unveils a brand new away kit for the Premier League champions, we travel to Liverpool to capture it on young fans from the area.
Liv Little finds the 23-year-old Walsall-born singer-songwriter on the cusp of an extraordinary second act – and offering up her full self for the first time.
From buying shirts off random people’s backs to criss-crossing Europe’s thrift stores with his military sack, Ladi Kazeem does whatever it takes to find the rarest tees.
The environmental protest group reboots this week with a new round of actions. But in a time of Covid-19, looming recession, mass unemployment, deteriorating mental health and racial trauma, is it enough to recapture our attention?
How lockdown, mountains, therapy and bass shaped the Welsh artist’s new techno-pop album.
Australian jewellery designer Seb Brown weighs in on his love of precious metals, the pleasure in creating and his new Melbourne shop-studio hybrid, at which his rings are handmade.
How do you top the pop album of 2020? By releasing an 18-track all-star remix collab only five months later. Dua Lipa, executive producer The Blessed Madonna and some of those special guests lift the lid and drop the needle on the party set we all need right now.
The Central Saint Martins sculpture student creates work through a make-believe lens, offering an escape from his mental health while creating expressive characters of everyday people.
Following last year’s successful exhibition-cum-knees up in London, curator Ben Broome returns with his fifth instalment in Paris. Masks on, go see work by Frank LeBon, Bianca Saunders, Rhea Dillon and more.
In the absence of a real summer this year, the Bradford-born fine artist has teamed up with Wavey Garms’ Andrés Branco to create a series of pieces inspired by the golden days of London subcultures.
The Oscar-nominated film that’s the new La Haine – but also, explains its director, so much more.
The artist’s work is a very British nudge and a wink, but he’s still a man on a mission to find higher meaning…