Back in print for the first time since 1970, Dennis Stock’s California Trip serves as a radical visual history, depicting the Sunshine State at its heady peak.
In the ’70s, six suspects confessed to murders they had no recollection of committing. In his latest project, photographer Jack Latham attempts to find out why.
The artist discusses his appearance in new exhibition On Our Backs, which celebrates the revolutionary work of LGBTQ sex workers, activists and allies.
Ahead of its UK release, the team behind The Last Black Man In San Francisco explain how they made this year’s indie breakout – a story about friendship, solitude and displacement.
With a haunting new composition for a feverish new film, the British disruptor is back doing what she does best – smashing boundaries, breaking new ground.
With his new record 2020, the Newcastle songwriter is looking to the (close) future; a world of dead-end jobs, bigoted butchers and retractable extension leads.
When Kevin Marks turned his archive into a free reading resource, it developed into a network determined to preserve skate culture, promote literacy and celebrate community.
The fashion world may be promoting a new, more ‘sustainable’ kind of consumerism – but no matter what they try and sell, buying new will never lead to real change.
As Queen Lactacia, Nemis Quinn Mélançon-Golden is taking the world of drag by storm. We speak with him and his mother about the highs and lows of finding stardom at just 10 years old.
Technology’s grip on our attention span is grinding us down. But writer Jenny Odell has come up with an alternative: a mindset where slowing down is the only way to survive.
From terrorism and torture to paedophilia – no subject is taboo for Swiss theatre director Milo Rau. We catch up with him to discuss sadism, activism, and the limits of artistic freedom.
Charlie Brooker and Annabel Jones have mastered the art of depicting society at its most anxiety-inducing. But when it comes to the future, the pair aren’t ready to panic just yet.