category
peace week
Georgie Wright
“Who are you to tell me what I can and can’t talk about?” Mya-Rose is on a mission to get young people interested in nature, and change the world while she’s at it. Not bad for a 15-year-old.
Tom Rasmussen
Brilliant LGBTQIA+ activists on the ways they create spaces and take action to liberate the community. We’ve come far, but, as Celine Dion once sang, there’s miles to go before we sleep.
Olivia Head, Ryan White
“What makes me happy about London is that I feel like a human again here. I haven’t felt that in such a long time.” For i-D’s Peace Week, we meet five men and women from refugee backgrounds, who share their stories about coming to London.
Roisin Lanigan
“If you’re not fighting it, you’re part of the problem.”
Francesca Gavin
Responding to everything from surveillance to the structures that control our lives, Chicago-born artist and poet Diamond Stingily’s work is important, necessary and, most importantly, exciting.
Nathalie Olah
Since 2013, British performance artist Mark McGowan has been confronting today’s endless stream of injustice and corruption with angry, politicised and hilarious daily rants as The Artist Taxi Driver. But who is the man behind the wraparound shades?
Tish Weinstock
The trailblazing teenager and Free Periods founder on human bodies, being a grown-up and the illusion of being cool.
Shukri Lawrence
Palestinian artist Shukri Lawrence has loved Freaky Prince$$ rapper Brooke Candy since he was 14. So we said, why don’t you just phone her up over Skype and do a bonkers fashion shoot?
Reem Kawasmi
As part of 18-year-old Palestinian artist Shukri Lawrence’s Peace Week takeover, he asked his friend Reem Kawasmi to share a poem that hopes for freedom and harmony.
23-year-old Palestinian refugee Omar Braika is documenting the stories of those in the Zaatari Syrian refugee camp of Jordan.
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