A brief history of disease in video games
From Far Cry 2 to World of Warcraft, what can we learn from virtual epidemics in a time of coronavirus?
From Far Cry 2 to World of Warcraft, what can we learn from virtual epidemics in a time of coronavirus?
With frustration comes fearlessness, if the young, emerging British artists of today are anything to go by. Responding to the politics, protest and pandemic of the past year, THE FACE introduces you to 13 bold and brilliant painters, photographers, filmmakers and sculpturists making British art special.
Photographer Chloe Pang has been snapping away at Los Angeles residents over the past year, with the intention of creating an unbiased news source.
Life-size butterflies, floral ecosystems and deep-sea claws! Olivia Tonin, Elina Jung, Tomoya Nakagawa and Rohan Mirza dive deep into the creation of new-age nails.
Never mind the doom and gloom. If the SS22 collections are anything to go by, head-to-toe black is out and big, brash colour is in, in, IN!
The place to be for this season’s hottest takes, trends, faces, soundtracks, cool kids, weirdos, gossips and MORE!
Through deft social satire and political allegory, South Korea has not only grasped a defining monster of western cinema for themselves – they’re now leading hordes across the globe with a brand of undead movie-making of their own.
The queer-run platform Community Bread has tapped DJs Mike Servito, Xiorro and Jasmine Infinitti, among others, for a stream this weekend to help rebuild the dance community from the ground up.
Getting to the crux is writer Matt Burgess, whose new book Artificial Intelligence – part of the WIRED series – weighs up the pros and cons of surveillance, personal data and face recognition.
The subversive one-stop-shop for the best art, gear and trinkets is intrinsic to the city’s creative scene. Its founder, Erin Fremder, gives us a proper local’s (virtual) tour.
Antwerp’s MoMu Gallery tackles three decades of fashion in E/MOTION, exploring the defining socio-political moments in an exhibition that emphasises the transformative nature of clothing.
The 33 designers became bedroom bound mid-term, waving a solemn goodbye to the Central Saint Martins studios (they were paying for). But it didn’t get in the way of their graduate collections – if anything, it made them even better.
Masculinisation, slimming, sculpting, the quest for a “perfect” face, or just the latest surgery trend? We investigate.
Between Borders’ latest project is a moving collection of journal entries detailing life on the frontline.
University life has never been more challenging. Rent hikes. Online lectures. Part-time work killing all-time partying. We asked students in Newcastle, Glasgow, Bristol, Aberystwyth and Belfast to weigh in.
Three demonstrations took place across the city last week arranged by three different organisers, all of whom were under the age of 30.
Lex Shu Chan and Claire Sachiko launched digital cookbook Recipes Against Racism last month. Featuring dishes from leading Asian restaurants and chefs, the pair are on a mission to raise money and stop anti-Asian hate crime.