NiNE8 are the DIY collective playing by their own rules
The London-based artists on their just released, genre-defying second mixtape, NOSMOKEVOL2.
The London-based artists on their just released, genre-defying second mixtape, NOSMOKEVOL2.
As Kaytranada and Aminé drop their joint album Kaytraminé, THE FACE team picks out some of our favourite collab albums of all time.
Ayton is the megaphone-wielding figurehead of a movement that aims to eradicate institutionalised racism wherever it’s found. As focus turns from marches to three-tier local lockdowns, the 29-year-old is contemplating how to maintain momentum while socially distanced, and how to create real and lasting change within the UK.
“This movie is a two-hour-and-45-minute long tribute.”
For AW22, the creative director took over ornate Parisian grounds to present the luxury house’s latest collection to a thumping club soundtrack.
Alter-egos, privacy and surveillance are just some of the reasons behind drill’s masks and balaclavas.
“I have really high hopes. We are always taught to aim high, so fuck it I’m aiming high. I want to be president of Interpol or the UN. Just fuck it.”
London Film Festival: The male perspective has dominated films for over a century. In her new documentary, Nina Menkes tracks how filmmakers have long objectified women – and why that’s so harmful.
Backstage, shows, people, parties. Watch, listen, read.
How to look good naked: new club night Dirty Mind encourages both tuxedos and birthday suits.
Mark Hunter spent the mid-’00s documenting the era’s sauciest and naughtiest parties. 15 years on, his Y2Ks Archive book features Ye, MIA, Paris Hilton and more.
Find out what happened when we sent the Taste Cadets off packing into the Great British Wilderness, with nothing but bog roll, a three-man tent and an ox heart to keep them entertained/alive.
By day, they’re balancing spreadsheets and cooking up sales strategies. By night, they’re head banging to My Chemical Romance. Welcome to the dual life of corporate emos.
The monthly party which began as a nomadic gathering of like-minded hedonists in illegal warehouses has grown to include a music label, a permanent home at the canal-side club Griessmuehle and, now, a book.
Ready for his close-up, with solo project EOB and his first ever solo interview.
The artist opened his latest exhibition, England’s Lost Camelot, last weekend. After labouring on the artworks through both lockdown and nerves, he's ready to show the world how he's rewritten (sorry, repainted) the country's history.
There has still not been another openly gay Black footballer since Justin Fashanu. Twenty-four years on from his death, the one thing that resonates most strongly throughout his story is the silence.