Ranking the most insane political merch in recent American history
July 31, 2019 5:00 pmFrom liberal-trolling straws to Mitch McConnell's cocaine tee, a short history of political crimes against taste.
From liberal-trolling straws to Mitch McConnell's cocaine tee, a short history of political crimes against taste.
Photographer Lee Whittaker and stylist Lilia Toncheva O'Rourke collaborate on this exclusive fashion portfolio for Document Online.
‘We know that it is not over’: Governor Ricardo Rosselló has finally promised to resign, but protestors aren't ready to go home.
Jacinda Ardern, despite not being in the race, has earned coveted endorsements from both Marianne Williamson and Pete Buttigieg.
Trading post-Soviet nostalgia for an avant-garde future, young Eastern European is celebrating a multi-faceted cultural heritage—through neon babushka scarves and cabbage-inspired coats.
You can't judge a book by its cover, but you can judge the Democratic debates by the books the presidential hopefuls can't stop talking about.
Why black market beauty products from South Korea are a threat to the authoritarian regime.
Reproductive rights are under threat around the world—Elizabeth Senja Spackman reminds us of their deeply personal implications, in a handwritten, illustrated account.
The Whitney Biennial-featured artist Ilana Harris-Babou uses the Hamptons and Restoration Hardware as anthropological playgrounds.
By 2020, China will overtake the U.S. to become the world’s biggest milk producer.
The serpentine “technoprincess” conjures a playlist to celebrate the launch of her mens jewelry line, featuring tracks by Marie Davidson and Miss Kittin.
“I want people back home to know that people here have their back...we don’t only have Algerian people, we have New Yorkers from all walks of life that care and support us too.”
Document celebrates World Watercolor Month with Tschabalala Self, Mats Gustafson, and more.
Pat Ivers and Emily Armstrong tell us how they filmed at punk's most outrageous venues while surviving off gallery wine and cheese.
YouTube corporate claims disinformation doesn't dominate the platform. Science says otherwise.
Photographer Janette Beckman looks back at the mods, punks, and ska kids who stuck it to the man before callouts were cool.
Author Lisa Taddeo sets the record straight on sex positivity, #MeToo, and why she's not Carrie Bradshaw.
Canadian businessman Miles Nadal completed his haul of 100 of the world’s rarest sneakers.
Experience the "alphabetized, colorized and disney-tized" collection in the first edition of our new 'Story of an Archive' series.
Owner Sharon Jane Smith takes her final bow as a life-long keeper of ephemera: "It’s not fair if I go to my grave knowing all of this and not sharing it."
Our wishes are granted: Will Smith is the new face of Moncler Genius.
Take a look behind the scenes at some of the '90s most iconic shoots, with a stylist who defined the era.
Designer Vasilis Loizides' summer reading list will transport you to new realms and change your perception.
Astro-glide into the weekend with yeule's latest release, "Pretty Bones," and her mix of aquatic, spacey electronica.
His Brooklyn Museum exhibition ‘Future Fashion’ opens on the 50th anniversary of the first moon landing.
Photographer and director Alex Black collaborates with stylist Herin Choi to bring his vision of fashion inspired by the digital era to life.
Beam me up Sputnik!—5 Soviet counterparts to your favorite space films
Yuima Nakazato introduces fermented microbes and digital fabrication to the guarded tradition of haute couture.
Read the futurist mastermind's revelations on UFOs, Reagan's ‘Space Force,’ and smooching Allen Ginsberg.
Scalping your eyeballs isn't a biohack, only a distraction from the root of our ills.
Photographer Jamel Shabazz recreates the iconic image of 177 artists including the Wu-Tang Clan and The Roots.
The artist brings Tim Burton's Gotham to Le Corbusierto's iconic Cité Radieuse.
Humanizing the headlines at this year's World Press Photo Exhibition.
Emily Lipson photographs Campbell-Gillies on the Long Island Expressway, as the two discuss why fashion isn't ‘stupid girls playing dress up.’
Even prehistoric beasts can't escape the wrath of climate change.
Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedow—taking a note from Trump, Kim, and Putin—has been distracting us from human rights violations with puppies, horses, and a viral rap video.
Red Hook Labs spotlights 25 globe-spanning artists, selected by a panel including Kim Jones and Edward Enninful.
The British makeup artist tells Document about the books that shaped her progressive sense of beauty.
Photographer Sean Alexander Geraghty shares stories from Havana’s Chinatown—once the largest in all of Latin America.
Beginning next week, an extended cut of Solange's futuristic, redemptive film 'When I get Home' will be screened internationally.
Chemical runoff from a nearby power plant has made the "Novosibirsk Maldives" the perfect yoga selfie backdrop.
"Blackness and queerness are just such expansive and deep wells of knowledge and inspiration. It’s a gift to be able to access that and create work that is formed by this abundance."
As historical sites are bulldozed daily, artists at JINGART 2019 reflect on the importance of the past.
Elisha Lim's upcoming graphic novel decodes our post-breakup nightmares.
Document explores the marketing initiative bringing celebrities, world leaders, and diaspora artists back to West Africa.
The punk protest performers trade Moscow for Birmingham in a sold-out show today.
Captivating images of paranoia and fantasy from the photographer's latest book.
How the humble 1969 “Shelltoe” and Run DMC laid the groundwork for contemporary sneaker culture.
“I'm seduced by writing that makes me feel something—and intensely so. I love the thrust of shorter literature it pulls, rolls, and leaves before you can tie it down to one idea.”
Document revisits Louis Vuitton's iconic 1997 Centennial Collection campaign with Guzman, the irreverent photography duo who pulled it off.