ACCESS, VOL.5
Written by Pages Editorial.
For a while I have thought about the idea of access.
Access to culture, to connection.
There is truly a sense of routine. I feel like I’m on a world tour of accessibility. Seeing each one of your click on this silly little write up means the world. Readers in Dublin, Shangrao, Luxembourg, Zagreb, it’s all surreal. Your messages are heavenly. Thank you for welcoming this new venture with open arms.
In volume 5, a few new spots to visit in Pairs, a new collection from an LVMH semi finalist, inspired by a quote from Andy Warhol. Paper Magazines latest cover and so on. Read on!
Your access, weekly.
Paris, where to:
A few new spots to try.
For coffee and snacks, @telescopecafe.
For drinks, @lapatatedouce_radio
For dinner, @sugaarparis
JULIE KEGELS’ FW26 AURA COLLECTION.
Yes, a season late. Best described in this write up on Vogue Runway. LVMH Prize semi-finalist Julie Kegel describes to @fashionroadmantv her inspiration behind the collection. Inspired by a book by Andy Warhol where he writes that' ‘everyone has aura until they open their mouths’, from this the idea of creating aura within the clothing was born. Pieces with their own shadows, wool tailoring - we couldn’t pass up sharing this, despite the tardiness.
AYO EDEBIRI FOR PAPER MAGAZINE
Everything about this. The Bear breakout is making her Broadway debut in a revival of Proof, opposite Don Cheadle, directed by Thomas Kail. Casual. Playing Catherine, a girl, as Edebiri puts it, who ‘feels all the corners of her heart.’ The play, written for a white family, is now a Black one. It's still a living document. The playwright is in the room. Line changes arrive daily. Edebiri wouldn't have it any other way.
Ayo Edebiri and Don Cheadle have put their own money into subsidised student tickets, because what's the point of great theatre if the wrong people can't get in the door? A fantastic interview and art piece. To be honest, better you see it at the source. Read here.
Photography @jasamuller
Story @ydesta
Cover illustration @jasamuller
Graphic design @compositeco
Naturally, we’re recommending the source material for the play above. Proof by David Auburn is a short, sharp & gripping read. A Pulitzer prize winner that reads like a thriller (hold me back.) Catherine is a young woman who has spent years caring for her father Robert, a once-brilliant but mentally ill mathematician at the University of Chicago. As the play opens, he has just died. Her sister Claire arrives from New York to sort out the estate, and Hal, a former student of Robert's turns up going through his notebooks hoping to find something of value buried in the chaos.
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