Voyaging into Lucy Dodd’s magical family space
March 30, 2018 8:49 pm Leave your thoughtsWhat Document overheard on the artist's latest opening at David Lewis Gallery.
What Document overheard on the artist's latest opening at David Lewis Gallery.
With The Louisiana Book, the Dutch photographer captures the essence of youth untamed and in the wild.
Kim Jong-un's government is seizing all "anti-socialist" sing-along machines.
The actress in conversation with Alissa Bennett, the creator of the biannual morbid zine "Dead is Better."
Total erasure of immigrant communities.
The artist and model on working in an industry looking to make amends.
Up to 3.2 billion people are already at risk due to overfarming, mining, and urban infrastructures.
Photographs by a student at Bethesda-Chevy Chase High School in Maryland capture an historic day of demonstration in Washington, D.C.
Conservative America is in a panic.
A bill filed by City Councilman Rafael L. Espinal would require companies with more than ten employees to refrain from off-hour communications.
The former artistic director of Dior Homme speaks with the Grammy-nominated musician Woodkid on creativity in the age of Instagram and what it means to be one of the last long-term artistic directors in fashion.
The tragedy in Arizona took place at the intersection of economic inequality and urban planning's long-standing apathy for pedestrians.
As the Cambridge Analytica revelations widen, the company's demise no longer seems like a fantastical possibility.
The art made by Guantanamo Bay detainees and the photographs of Edmund Clarke, both on display in New York City this spring, offers new perspectives to the drab palette of indefinite war—and the endless reach of American hegemony.
Photographer Daisy Walker joins forces with Fashion Editor Alice Lefons to tell a story of lasting love
Document spoke with an archivist with England's Mass Observation Unit about a special artifact on life in one of the country's oldest prisons.
The prominent feminist author of 'The Female Eunuch' is thought to be against the #MeToo movement, yet a close reading of her words portrays an entirely different stance.
The platform has found itself in the past weeks waging cultural battles with several French users over the use of nudity in works of art, leading to new international legal precedents being set against the U.S.-based social network.
Los Angeles now has a design Czar, it turns out humans began innovating much earlier in history than assume, and the Vatican comes clean about photoshopping a letter.
For Contact Sheet, Document asks a photographer about the unseen story of a frame that defines their work.
A new book collects the zany world of "eyeball cards" used amongst Britain's CB radio users in the late 70s and early 80s.
The stately painter, whose attentive personality flourished in the underground of 1970s New York, tells Document the stories behind the stories of his collected journals, Twentieth-Century Boy.
The hairstylist discusses his embrace of creative spontaneity, the importance of positive collaborations, and why he doesn't search for inspiration in books.
Half of the world's wildlife may be gone in the next century, the devil is trending, and listening to your favorite song while studying isn't going to help you.
The first woman to lead the House of Dior and her daughter Rachele Regini share their thoughts on femininity, wearability and taking fashion into the future.
The iPhone may be a brain surgeon's best friend, meet the Cobalt Cowboy, and were Hubert de Givenchy and Audrey Hepburn the original influencers?
Photographer Toshinao Kumakura and stylist Venia Polyhronaki find inspiration in the 80s for this Document exclusive
Document does some casual eavesdropping at the 24th edition of New York City's most collectable art fair.
Wearing makeup may come at cost for women in leadership roles, Leonardo Da Vinci's notes on urban planning may be of use today, and DJ Honey Dijon on reclaiming the club as a "safe space."
A new book reveals UFO drawings collected from six decades of correspondence sent to a top-secret agency of the British Government.
A survey of noise pollution across the world, the Frida Kahlo Barbie Doll is problematic, and Russia now legally recognizes contemporary art.
There is a toxic history to the pigment that makes the color orange, a shanty-town is home to the thriving Ugandan film industry, and is the death of the MP3 finally upon us?
Doctors in the Czech Republic have been using a radioactive pool to treat patients, the field of neuroforensics comes to the courtroom, and the Vatican hopes to hack the world’s problems.
Document sits down with collaborative duo Camilla Staerk and Helena Christensen to discuss their upcoming projects and finding inspiration in their Nordic heritage
Rei Kawakubo's Fall/Winter 2018 collection banished seriousness in favor of effusive expressions of form, color, and visual pleasure.
A VR hacking collective take over MoMA for a night, the first major exhibition of western art is set to show in Tehran, and one researcher examines the question of culture's influence on the mind.
Bundled wraps, plastic sheets, thick coats—it’s not just layering that's dominating Fall 2018 collections, but a clear need for safety and comfort in times of uncertainty.
Activists Xiuhtezcatl Roske-Martinez and Rosario Dawson connect over the voices of youth activism, now more integral than ever
Holding hands might ease a partner's pain, polar regions encounter this year's spring weather before the rest of the globe, and Dolce & Gabbana comes to a kitchen near you.
Photographer Alexandra Leese gives Document an exclusive look at her latest photo essay in which stereotypes of masculinity are dismantled in the city of her birth.
The visionary house expands their Antifer collection into series of infinitely curving white-gold bracelets.
Irv Teibel’s ‘Environments’ created a whole new category of escapist listening in the ’60s and ’70s. Now reissued as an app by the Numero Group, can its original promise of aural sanctuary be updated for the present?
Japan rebuts cannibalistic fake news, satire could actually, maybe, be a political motivator, and selfies are warping self-perception.
Every week for Contact Sheet, Document asks a photographer for the unseen story about the frame that has come to define their work.
"I find a great sensuality in surfing itself, getting changed in the early morning in the parking lot, putting on the wetsuit and getting ready for the cold, European ocean."
A pact protecting environmental activists in South America is set to be signed, 4G service comes to the moon, and the poetry collector behind the largest English collection in the world is dead.