Kaleidoscope #43/FW23 HARMONY KORINE by Daniel Arnold
Kaleidoscope Magazine
€ 18.00 *
Sales unit: pcs
Delivery time (DE): Within 1-2 business days
Availability: Only 1 available
KALEIDOSCOPE’s new issue 43 (Fall/Winter 2023) launches with a set of six covers.
With a career stretching from the pre-9/11 nihilistic hedonism of New York City to the gamified, small-screen fictions of TikTok’s psychedelic everyday, filmmaker and artist HARMONY KORINE is emblematic of America’s aesthetics. Photographed in Miami by Daniel Arnold, he talks to Lil Internet about his latest film, Aggro Dr1ft, where worldbuilding and AI push narrative cinema to its glitching limits.
In our front-of-the-book section, ESCAPE TO MIAMI portrays the most southernly city in the US, existing in the tropical recesses of the American imagination: land of celebrity, thunderstorms, Tony Montana, and Art Deco architecture. Here, we meet the latest generation of Miamians—committed radicals in the fields of art, fashion, and music who are dreaming up new narratives for the city they call home. Featuring Andrew Downtown, Cat Power, Susan Kim Alvarez, Nite Owl Drive-In, and Rice Hotel, photographed by Sam Hayes.
For this issue’s Carte Blanche section, KALEIDOSCOPE invites independent Paris-based publisher RED LEBANESE to present Hanabi, a new project by Pablo Jomaron and Ben Dorado. In this space of freedom, they confront and juxtapose their work to invent new narratives, focusing on personal storytelling through their respective photographic practices.
Also featured in this issue: London-based band Bar Italia (photography by Jessica Madavo and interview by Conor McTernan), the archives of Hysteric Glamour (photography by Lorenzo Dalbosco and interview by Akio Kunisawa), Japanese underground illustrator Yoshitaka Amano (words by Alex Shulan), Marseille-based young artist Sara Sadik (photography by Nicolas Poillot and interview by Daria Miricola), a survey about Japanese hip-hop’s new scene starring Tohji (photography by Taito Itateyama and words by Ashley Ogawa Clarke), Richard Prince’s new book“TheEntertainers” (words by Brad Phillips), “New Art: London” (featuring Adam Farah-Saad, Lenard Giller, Charlie Osborne, R.I.P. Germain, and Olukemi Ljiadu, photographed by Bolade Banjo and interviewed by Ben Broome).
English
With a career stretching from the pre-9/11 nihilistic hedonism of New York City to the gamified, small-screen fictions of TikTok’s psychedelic everyday, filmmaker and artist HARMONY KORINE is emblematic of America’s aesthetics. Photographed in Miami by Daniel Arnold, he talks to Lil Internet about his latest film, Aggro Dr1ft, where worldbuilding and AI push narrative cinema to its glitching limits.
In our front-of-the-book section, ESCAPE TO MIAMI portrays the most southernly city in the US, existing in the tropical recesses of the American imagination: land of celebrity, thunderstorms, Tony Montana, and Art Deco architecture. Here, we meet the latest generation of Miamians—committed radicals in the fields of art, fashion, and music who are dreaming up new narratives for the city they call home. Featuring Andrew Downtown, Cat Power, Susan Kim Alvarez, Nite Owl Drive-In, and Rice Hotel, photographed by Sam Hayes.
For this issue’s Carte Blanche section, KALEIDOSCOPE invites independent Paris-based publisher RED LEBANESE to present Hanabi, a new project by Pablo Jomaron and Ben Dorado. In this space of freedom, they confront and juxtapose their work to invent new narratives, focusing on personal storytelling through their respective photographic practices.
Also featured in this issue: London-based band Bar Italia (photography by Jessica Madavo and interview by Conor McTernan), the archives of Hysteric Glamour (photography by Lorenzo Dalbosco and interview by Akio Kunisawa), Japanese underground illustrator Yoshitaka Amano (words by Alex Shulan), Marseille-based young artist Sara Sadik (photography by Nicolas Poillot and interview by Daria Miricola), a survey about Japanese hip-hop’s new scene starring Tohji (photography by Taito Itateyama and words by Ashley Ogawa Clarke), Richard Prince’s new book“TheEntertainers” (words by Brad Phillips), “New Art: London” (featuring Adam Farah-Saad, Lenard Giller, Charlie Osborne, R.I.P. Germain, and Olukemi Ljiadu, photographed by Bolade Banjo and interviewed by Ben Broome).
English
*Incl. VAT and plus shipping costs.