“What we habitually see confirms us. Yet it can happen, suddenly, unexpectedly.” Photographer Pegah Farahmand and fashion editor Dogukan Nesanir collaborate on this fashion portfolio for Document’s Fall/Winter 2024–25 issue
“To remain innocent may also be to remain ignorant.” Photographer Rodrigo Carmuega and fashion editor Laetitia Leporq collaborate on this fashion portfolio for Document’s Fall/Winter 2024–25 issue
“All photographs are there to remind us of what we forget” For Document’s Fall/Winter 2024–25 issue, Sam Penn photographs some of her closest friends and collaborators near and far on Fire Island and on FaceTime screens
Film Harley Chamandy’s ‘Allen Sunshine’ is a meditation on the quiet beauty of nature The Canadian director unpacks the many dimensions to his Werner Herzog Award-winning feature film
Above the Fold What it’s actually like to own a marijuana dispensary as a woman of color in Colorado “People think that dispensary owners are just rolling in dough, and that is just not the case.” A window into a broken, out-moded system with... by Daisy Prince Above the Fold Bob Colacello captured the private hours of the 70s most public figures How Bob Colacello became the one every A-Lister shared their secrets with. by Daisy Prince Above the Fold Paradise Found: Can this new club make Times Square fun? Can the joint venture between ex-Studio 54 proprietor Ian Schrager and the bohemian nightclub House of Yes create a new Paradise in Times Square? by Daisy Prince Above the Fold Amy Lamé gives voice to London After Dark London's Night Czar is using legislation to preserve endangered art spaces; New York should take note. by Daisy Prince Above the Fold New York introduces three bills to put an end to sexual harassment at clubs and bars New York councilman Rafael Espinal, and House of Yes founders Kaye Burke and Anya Sapozhnikova, drafted a consent and awareness policy. by Daisy Prince Documented Drenched and rapturous, New York City’s Dance Parade celebrates a new chapter With the repeal of the repressive Cabaret Laws that had been a thorn in the side of club goers for a century, New York City... by Daisy Prince Documented 50 years later, a new look at the 1968 Paris protests from a lost archive Hidden away for half a century, rare photographs by a young freelancer captured the chaos and optimism of three weeks of social unrest known as... by Daisy Prince Conversations If knowledge is power, then coders like Fereshteh Forough and Barbara Liskov will inherit the earth Two women helping to lead the tech sector towards greater diversity and inclusion discuss the power of code to advance women from America to Afghanistan. by Daisy Prince At Large Taking back New York City’s nightlife NYC is finally free to dance without fear of crackdown again with the repeal of New York’s 91-year-old Cabaret Law. by Daisy Prince Above the Fold The ‘Soul of a Nation’ comes to a small corner of America’s heartland The groundbreaking Tate Modern show comes, of all places, to the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in Arkansas by Daisy Prince Above the Fold Transient Hedonism at Blind Man’s Ball On the search for pleasure and temporary intimacy, costume clad New Yorkers swarmed a dilapidated Yonkers mansion for Blind Man's Ball. by Daisy Prince
Above the Fold What it’s actually like to own a marijuana dispensary as a woman of color in Colorado “People think that dispensary owners are just rolling in dough, and that is just not the case.” A window into a broken, out-moded system with... by Daisy Prince
Above the Fold Bob Colacello captured the private hours of the 70s most public figures How Bob Colacello became the one every A-Lister shared their secrets with. by Daisy Prince
Above the Fold Paradise Found: Can this new club make Times Square fun? Can the joint venture between ex-Studio 54 proprietor Ian Schrager and the bohemian nightclub House of Yes create a new Paradise in Times Square? by Daisy Prince
Above the Fold Amy Lamé gives voice to London After Dark London's Night Czar is using legislation to preserve endangered art spaces; New York should take note. by Daisy Prince
Above the Fold New York introduces three bills to put an end to sexual harassment at clubs and bars New York councilman Rafael Espinal, and House of Yes founders Kaye Burke and Anya Sapozhnikova, drafted a consent and awareness policy. by Daisy Prince
Documented Drenched and rapturous, New York City’s Dance Parade celebrates a new chapter With the repeal of the repressive Cabaret Laws that had been a thorn in the side of club goers for a century, New York City... by Daisy Prince
Documented 50 years later, a new look at the 1968 Paris protests from a lost archive Hidden away for half a century, rare photographs by a young freelancer captured the chaos and optimism of three weeks of social unrest known as... by Daisy Prince
Conversations If knowledge is power, then coders like Fereshteh Forough and Barbara Liskov will inherit the earth Two women helping to lead the tech sector towards greater diversity and inclusion discuss the power of code to advance women from America to Afghanistan. by Daisy Prince
At Large Taking back New York City’s nightlife NYC is finally free to dance without fear of crackdown again with the repeal of New York’s 91-year-old Cabaret Law. by Daisy Prince
Above the Fold The ‘Soul of a Nation’ comes to a small corner of America’s heartland The groundbreaking Tate Modern show comes, of all places, to the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in Arkansas by Daisy Prince
Above the Fold Transient Hedonism at Blind Man’s Ball On the search for pleasure and temporary intimacy, costume clad New Yorkers swarmed a dilapidated Yonkers mansion for Blind Man's Ball. by Daisy Prince