You’re not mad. You’re just human
Actor and writer Zawe Ashton’s new play is a “love letter” shining a light on mental health issues within the black British community.
Actor and writer Zawe Ashton’s new play is a “love letter” shining a light on mental health issues within the black British community.
THE FACE speaks to the founder of the film company behind the 2001 cult classic, which eschewed cheesy porn music in favour of boundary-pushing techno.
Volume 4 Issue 002: Is it real? Is it prophesied? Are we to blame? And will the gods fix it? A rabbi, a reverend and a Rastafarian walk into a magazine to find out...
Romeo and Juliet… and Rosaline. The Booksmart and Dopesick star on shaking up Shakespeare, loving Louis Vuitton – and defending Olivia Wilde.
After leaving Merthyr Tydfil, photographer Aran Harris felt at odds with his sense of home. In Hiraeth, he sees his Welsh roots in a whole new light.
Artist Tan Gillies mixes moving image, painting, sculpture and photography in a soul-bearing new exhibition tackling mental health, domestic abuse and the hard road to getting clean.
100%: Ángel Ballesteros, the lead singer of the Mexico-based trio, talks Justin Bieber, their Nick León-produced debut album and finally listening to mum’s advice.
It’s estimated that the legal industry will be worth $146bn by 2025. That’s a lot of green to go around. So how do you get involved?
Volume 4 Issue 003: We went scouting about in Milky Button Park, south Manchester to find out why.
Lu shares her feelings on the inspiring artists, musicians and writers of New York
Lewis Capaldi, Cardi B, Will Smith and Ed Sheeran have all joined TikTok. We ask three pro-creators to review their viral dance challenges.
A photography book documents the much-loved footwork pioneer from 2011-2014, as he pushed the underground Chicago sound across the globe.
California-born designer Matthew M. Williams brought American swag to the streets of Paris.
We’ve long-seen Britain’s gory gang life played out on screen, and even charting in the Top 40. As for books? Not so much, until Gabriel Krauze – once juggling a criminal career and a university degree – released his ultraviolent debut, Who They Was, last year.
With rapid beats and head-turning dance moves, the Newark genre has found a natural home on the app. Its influence is spreading far and wide.
On the agenda: his spacey new direction, the need for a live scissors player, the importance of Vossi Bop, milking dry the Oasis cash cow and no questions about Liam (but we asked anyway).