Buly: The Beauty of Time Travel
I’ve come across the French grooming brand Buly as I normally do when I discover such treasures – by flaneuring across whatever city I happen to be in.
I’ve come across the French grooming brand Buly as I normally do when I discover such treasures – by flaneuring across whatever city I happen to be in.
On l_appelait Val, 1999 © Sarah Moon La ralentie, 2011 © Sarah Moon On the occasion of the new Sarah Moon exhibit at the Fotografiska museum in New York, we decided to forego an ordinary review, since in our world there is no such thing as a bad Sarah Moon exhibit. Instead, we decided to treat you…
On this freewheeling episode we host Jon Caramanica, the New York Times pop-music critic and “critical shopper” columnist. We talk about forming our style journeys in parts of Brooklyn you’ve never heard of, discuss our favorite stores, New York shopping, the demise of Barney’s, death of directional retail, argue about hip-hop and pop culture and…
We are back with the journalist and critic Philippe Pourhashemi to discuss the (few) ups and (many) downs of the S/S ’22 womenswear shows that just finished in Paris and Milan.
We speak with the American designer Geoffrey B Small, who has for decades operated outside of the corporate fashion system, about his experience of building an independent fashion house in Veneto, Italy.
No designer wants to be compared to another, but when such a comparison becomes the highest form of praise, it may be warranted.
On this episode we host Dr. Valerie Steele, the Director of the Museum at FIT (Fashion Institute of Technology), whose knowledge of fashion and ability to put it in socio-historical context is positively awe-inspiring.
If you are an avid reader of this magazine, you probably know that we treat any gesture of corporate sponsorship of political causes with suspicion.
When you look at the work of the Italian architect Vincenzo De Cotiis, its very materiality is what strikes you without you even necessarily consciously knowing it.
The Ethiopian-born artist Julie Mehretu is a member of the increasingly rare breed of a major contemporary artist, one who makes work both technically complex and visually compelling and conceptually relevant.