OUT NOW

ISSUE 43 FW23

KALEIDOSCOPE's Fall/Winter 2023 issue launches with a set of six covers. Featuring Sampha, Alex Katz, Harmony Korine, a report into the metamorphosis of denim, a photo reportage by Dexter Navy, and a limited-edition cover by Isa Genzken.

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 artist Sara Sadik (photography by Nicolas Poillot and interview by Daria Miricola), a survey about Japan’s new hip-hop scene starring Tohji (photography by Taito Itateyama and words by Ashley Ogawa Clarke), Richard Prince’s new book “The Entertainers” (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).

K43 Spreads 01
K43 Spreads 02
K43 Spreads 03
K43 Spreads 04
K43 Spreads 05
K43 Spreads 07
K43 Spreads 08
K43 Spreads 09
K43 Spreads 10
K43 Spreads 11
K43 Spreads 12
K43 Spreads 13
K43 Spreads 14
K43 Spreads 15
K43 Spreads 17
K43 Spreads 18
K43 Spreads 19
K43 Spreads 20
K43 Spreads 21
K43 Spreads 22
K43 Spreads 23
K43 Spreads 24

FROM THE CURRENT ISSUE

ESCAPE TO MIAMI

The most southernly city in the US, Miami exists 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.

NEW ART: LONDON 

The art world’s compulsion to categorize by the yardstick of “hot or not” has historically been the driving force behind the market and the gallery system. Commerce is intertwined with this metric, spurred on by the insatiable appetite to find talented young things to build up. This system is uninteresting: what’s in vogue rarely reflects those operating at the cutting edge. Who are those young emerging artists making work against all odds—work that is difficult and costly to make, store, exhibit, move, and sell? These five individuals typify this path. Working across video, sound, installation, and sculpture, they march onwards, carving out their own niche—exhibiting in empty shop spaces one day and major institutions the next. For them, making is guided by urgency, and persistence is motivated by blind faith.

SARA SADIK 

SM sarasadik DSC8385
SM sarasadik DSC8333 1
SM sarasadik DSC8329
SM sarasadik DSC8405 2

KALEIDOSCOPE hosted a solo exhibition by Marseille-based artist Sara Sadik (b. 1994, Bordeaux), in November 2023 at Spazio Maiocchi in Milan, with the support of Slam Jam. Inspired by videogames, anime, science fiction, and French rap, Sara Sadik’s work explores the reality and fantasies of France’s Maghrebi youth, addressing issues of adolescence, masculinity, and social mythologies. Her work across video, performance, and installation often centers on male characters, using computer-generated scenarios to transform their condition of marginalization into something optimistic and poetic.

FROM THE SHOP

FROM THE ARCHIVE

MANIFESTO

6
Kaleidoscope manifesto23 DSC2610
V3 B8720
Kaleidoscope manifesto23 DSC3121
3
Kaleidoscope manifesto23 DSC2823
8
Kaleidoscope manifesto23 DSC2477
9
Kaleidoscope manifesto23 DSC3747
7
Kaleidoscope manifesto23 DSC2736
4

In 2023, from June 22 to June 24 during Men’s Fashion Week in Paris, KALEIDOSCOPE and GOAT presented the new edition of our annual arts and culture festival, MANIFESTO. Against the unique setting of the French Communist Party building, a modern architectural landmark designed by legendary Brazilian architect Oscar Niemeyer, the festival will bring together visionary creators from different areas of culture across three days of art, fashion and sound. The 2024 edition will run from June 21 to June 23.

CAPSULE PLAZA

XL 1
TALKS 3
Beirut
Capsule NL 2404 5
Tacchini1
Bookshop
Capsule NL 2404 1
Listening 2
Dinner 2
Talks
Bar
Popupshop
Listening
Gufram
Talks

In April 2023, a year after the launch of the magazine, Capsule introduced Capsule Plaza, a new initiative that infuses new energy into Milan Design Week by redefining the design showcase format. A hybrid between a fair and a collective exhibition, Capsule Plaza brings together designers and companies from various creative fields, bridging industry and culture with a bold curation that spans interiors and architecture, beauty and technology, ecology and craft. The 2024 edition will run from April 15 to April 21.

IMAGINARY TV

FARFETCH x OFF-WHITE™

010 317 16 9

In February-March 2021, KALEIDOSCOPE and Farfetch team up to present a digital activation around the Off-White™ "Imaginary TV" live event in Milan, with exclusive KALEIDOSCOPE-created social content.

"Imaginary TV" is a digital extravaganza launched by Virgil Abloh, featuring upcoming artists from all disciplines, creating and performing live, together, on one global stage.

IMG 99 30
IMG 99 106
IMG 99 131
IMG 99 196
IMG 99 243
IMG 99 295

Photography: David Nana Opoku Ansah

"Children are the future. Younger brothers and sisters coming up and the next generation after us depend on artists to keep them inspired, in order to keep moving. They feed from our visions and voices for their growth process.

After my partner Kuukua Eshun and I founded Boxedkids, a non-profit organization which only focuses on education for children who don’t have the means to access it, art has been the only fuel that keeps the mission going. It’s my responsibility to speak about my experiences as a Ghanaian visually in a way that people don’t get to see often.

It’s important to tell our stories ourselves and make sure no one tells them for us. Ghana is a country blessed with rich culture, talents, and unique artists who are doing really well. We’re driving a vibrant creative revolution."

Prince Gyasi, visual artist

KALEIDOSCOPE FAR MICHELE 1 107
KALEIDOSCOPE FAR MICHELE 1 196
KALEIDOSCOPE FAR MICHELE 1 233
KALEIDOSCOPE FAR MICHELE 1 381
KALEIDOSCOPE FAR MICHELE 2 281

Photography: Jim Nedd

"I like to observe how aspects of my works develop and age over time. However, I always need new elements in a project—a new technique or medium, a new context—so that I can put myself in a completely unstable place again, a place of curiosity. I collaborate with musicians, light designers, costume designers…

I truly believe that, as an artist, you are never fully in control when it comes to creation. A project very soon acquires a life of it own. My performance work, Parallel, stemmed from the idea of connection at a distance.” This also resonated with the concept behind “Imaginary TV”: many performances coexisted within the same event."

Michele Rizzo, choreographer

13 A4000m col
13 A4108m col
13 A4152m col
13 A4171m col
13 A4266 col
13 A4277m col

Photography: Lorenzo Dalbosco

"I’ve always had a multifaceted and multidisciplinary practice rooted in collaboration. For me, collaboration is about taking my direction further, and this stimulation is as essential to my life as breathing.

I am actively collaborating with my musician friends. I sincerely hope to see it becoming a proper music label in the near future, to build a “Tokyo sound” that we can be proud of.

As a DJ, I always build my set as a ritual, created together with an audience of unknown people that I have never seen before. With my performance for “Imaginary TV,” this process became virtual and I tried to collate as many of my influences as possible, so that new viewers would experience with what I do."

Kiri Okuyama, DJ

010 338
010 611 color
020 230
030 058
050 054

Photography: Suzy and Leo

"For me, dance is freedom. When you are on stage you must let everything go, so you’re able to experience all kinds of emotions—love, sadness, even death—pushed to a whole other level of intensity.

I am excited that contemporary ballet has acquired such a big presence in the repertoire of the Paris Opera, and the Parisian dance scene in general. There was a great need for diversity in dance—not only among the artists, but also in the stories that we tell.

When I was offered to participate in Off-White’s “Imaginary TV,” it had been almost a year since I had last performed a “regular” show. The world of art and culture was on hold. So this opportunity really cheered me up: I went to a studio and let my imagination run."


Letizia Galloni, Paris Opera ballet dancer

210219 KALEIDOSCOPE FARFETCH OFF WHITE WALLETTE WATSON LOOK 01 FULL LOOK 000
210219 KALEIDOSCOPE FARFETCH OFF WHITE WALLETTE WATSON LOOK 01 FULL LOOK 169
210219 KALEIDOSCOPE FARFETCH OFF WHITE WALLETTE WATSON LOOK 01 FULL LOOK 182 2
210219 KALEIDOSCOPE FARFETCH OFF WHITE WALLETTE WATSON LOOK 01 FULL LOOK 365
210219 KALEIDOSCOPE FARFETCH OFF WHITE WALLETTE WATSON LOOK 02 PORTRAIT 808
210219 KALEIDOSCOPE FARFETCH OFF WHITE WALLETTE WATSON LOOK 01 FULL LOOK 001

Photography: Lula Hyers

"Journaling is a huge part of my creative process: that’s how I sort through my thoughts, my life experiences, my joys, my pains. It’s all pen to paper at first and then it becomes a story, a poem, a song.

I’m in my most creative place when I’m in nature. The moment I stop and take in God's breathtaking creation, is when inspiration comes flooding. I was born and raised in North Carolina and it’s my safe place. It made me who I am, gave me the heart and the soul. To this date, it still grounds me. New York, on the other hand, has been my place of growth. The years I’ve spent there have been the biggest and most beautiful, yet the hardest and most vulnerable.

After the year we’ve all had, it was such a blessing to be able to go on stage again for the “Imaginary TV” event. I got to perform with some crazy talented musicians—Ray Angry, Matt Gumley, Jason RC and Ambe. The energy in the room was absolutely amazing."

Wallette Watson, singer-songwriter

KALEIDOSCOPE FAR BINTA 2 68 1
KALEIDOSCOPE FAR BINTA 1 41
KALEIDOSCOPE FAR BINTA 1 91
KALEIDOSCOPE FAR BINTA 1 125
KALEIDOSCOPE FAR BINTA 1 127

Photography: Jim Nedd

"My Senegalese heritage has a huge role and place in my artistic practice, where “roots” are the starting point.

In my photo series Paysages Corporels, and in my performance for “Imaginary TV” alike, I aim to create a space for imagination and reflection about the representation of the female Black body. The body is a space of identity and testimony, and a tool of expressiveness par excellence.

I'm currently working on projects in Milan, where I live, but I’m also planning an exhibition in Abidjan, Ivory Coast. While being active in Italy means a lot to me, I am so happy to be in conversation with the art scene in Africa."

Binta Diaw, visual artist