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4 Oct

IS NEW YORK STILL COOL? JUST ASK THEM (SSENSE)

What happens when cool people meet up and hang out? Before social media became the de facto language of mass culture, the only way to understand the scenes defining a city was to find them in its bars, parties, and cafés. (Not in its offices, though, even if some of the scene-builders held day jobs.) Staking out these spaces is the best way to estimate the gap between youth culture as it’s captured and metabolized via mainstream social media trends and commentary—the Bravoification of subculture and trend forecasting, if you will—and the on-the-ground realities for the young and creative of today’s New York.

This is a snapshot of 11 individuals who are making 2024 more interesting. They’re not offline by any means—the Luddite anti-phone kids were hard to get in touch with—instead, they’re instead at the Cannes Film Festival with Paul Schrader; showing their work at MoMA PS1 or the Brooklyn Museum; writing cover stories for international magazines; headlining Osheaga; smoking a cigarette on a fire escape. Maybe in a building near you. Go say hi.

Taylor wears Anna Sui t-shirtMeryll Rogge bloomersAnna Sui socks, and We11done boots. Top Image: Ben (left) wears Still Kelly t-shirt. Shanny (middle) wears Paula Canovas del Vas polo. Jackson (right) wears Commission jacket and Commission pants.

TAYLOR JEANNE,
FILM PRODUCER
AND SCREENWRITER

What are you working on right now?

I’m half financed for my feature film, the first that I wrote myself. It’s called Car Crash Girl. I also wrote a feature, a coming of age story set in Phoenix, Arizona, where I’m from, about a girl learning how to drive—which I learned how to do two years ago because I lied on a job application.

Do you have a strong creative community?

You need to have writers around you. It can be such a lonely, in-your-head thing. Over the past six months I’ve really prioritized having that. I think we all have to hold each other accountable. You need somebody who’s going to text you and be like, “Do you have any pages for me to read? Pages tonight, queen?” My boss literally texted me that. Well, he’s 80 years old. He didn’t say “queen.” But he did say, “Pages?”

How’s Paul Schrader?

He’s a really fantastic mentor. He is such a fighter. He always says making a movie is entering a cage with a lion, and sometimes the lion wins and sometimes you win, but you got to get in the cage.

MEMPHY,
MODEL AND DJ

What are your rules for a good party?

When you try to overthink it is when you start to stress out and end up fucking up the most. Just try to have fun. Play your favorite music.

What songs are in your set right now?

I love baile funk, Brazilian-inspired music, house, and techno. I love mixing all different types of genres. I find it boring when you go out and you hear a DJ set and it’s the same thing the whole time.

The label It Girl—do you love it or hate it?

I can’t lie, I love it. Everyone has their own It Girl in them. What I love about New York is all It Girls have jobs.

Ben (left) wears Still Kelly t-shirt. Shanny (middle) wears Paula Canovas del Vas polo and Reebok Classics sneakers. Jackson (right) wears Commission jacket and Commission pants.

FCUKERS,
BAND

How would you describe your music?

Shanny Wise: Party?
Jackson Walker Lewis: That’s what I would say.

What’s been the vibe of the summer?

Wise: Party.
Ben Scharf: Rats.

Do you guys think New York is still cool?

Wise: Yes.
Lewis: Yeah.
Scharf: Can’t ever not be, right?

Daisaku wears Chopova Lowena hoodie.

DAISAKU HIDAKA,
ARTIST AND MODEL

When did you move to New York?

In 2022, from Japan. In New York, you got to be tough just to live and I’m really glad that I am having this experience.

Do you feel like there’s a big creative community?

There’s definitely a big community. I didn’t go to art school, but I’m figuring out how I can step into the art industry more.

Do you think you’ll live here forever?

I don’t know. I like LA. I can see moving to LA when I’m 30.

This is a chronic issue with New Yorkers. They turn 30 and they move to LA.

Yeah, exactly. But LA is pretty dope!

SEAN-KIERRE LYONS,
ARTIST

What do you hope someone takes away from your work?

I hope they laugh and feel sorrow at the same time—that they can be able to feel a juxtaposition.

Where do you find inspiration?

The definition of ecology is geared towards the natural world and how we interact with the natural world, but I’ve always viewed New York City as a natural world. It works as a habitat. We’re animals. We live in it, and the way we treat each other is based off of our habitat.

What are you working on?

I’m working on painting and drawing to hone my skills. I did a really big project earlier in the year, and I feel like a lot of times artists aren’t given a lot of breaks in between. I am allotting myself a little bit of time to refine and understand better what I’m doing and what I want to do.

SASHA GORDON,
ARTIST

How have you navigated the art scene in New York?

I feel very lucky. I’ve met so many great people, and especially younger artists who are going through similar journeys in the art world. It’s very hard to navigate. There’s not really any guidance. It’s very self-driven and really depends on who you meet and where you show. Once you get out of college, it’s hard to critique and talk about your work, so it’s important to me to have a community in New York.

Is New York still cool?

Absolutely. It’s better than LA.

What are you working on now?

I’m working on my next solo. I can’t say where! It’s not announced yet. I’ve been really obsessive with the studio, reasonably so, making lots of work. It’s been flowing.

GREY HOFFMAN,
MAKEUP ARTIST

When did you arrive in New York?

I moved here in 2018 for school and then I dropped out. I was two years in, and then life took me in a different direction. I started assisting makeup artists and that felt like reason enough not to go back.

Is New York cool?

I don’t know about New York as a whole, but my friends are really cool.

What’s on your agenda for the rest of the year?

Spend more time in Chicago with my family. But I do think I’m just going to be working and hanging out with my boyfriend. Is that boring?

No, that’s the New York dream. You’re a fab girl publically and a wholesome GF at home.

Exactly. Cooking, chilling, Nara Smith mode.

AMBER LATER,
MODEL AND WRITER

Where do you find inspiration?

I go on a lot of really long walks, especially in the summer. It can be social if I want to see a friend, but I like wandering. I live in Manhattan and I like seeing how the landscape and the neighborhoods change so quickly while you’re moving through them.

You’ve written about fashion, and as a model you’re in the fashion sphere. Good experience? Bad? Fun?

I’m very lucky as a writer to have been involved. It wasn’t something I’d anticipated would play a role in my life. Through my experiences working in fashion, I’ve met so many different people. There’s a lot of really intense personalities. There’s a lot of really unique situations. You’re meeting people from all over the world, which I think is one of the best parts. Those experiences are invaluable. And being a writer, it’s just thinking about different kinds of people trying to understand people.

NICOLAIA RIPS,
WRITER

Where do you write?

I write anywhere I can. I used to be very precious about writing spaces and now I’m like, stop, drop, and roll. I always have my computer. Every bag I own can fit my computer in it. That’s a rule.

What’s your For You Page like?

So much ASMR. I’m really obsessed with Levi Coralynn. A lot of people whispering, a lot of makeup tips, a lot of throwback videos, and sometimes people eating, but never foods that look delicious.

You’ve been called an It Girl. Do you accept the categorization?

Hari Nef said that somebody asked her about this and she was like, “I’m an actress.” To be an It Girl, you have to be undefined and mysterious. I wish I was mysterious but I have to write every single thought that comes into my head. So I think I’m a writer. Not really an It Girl.

How have you seen New York’s creative scene change?

I grew up in the Chelsea Hotel and that’s experienced so much change over the course of my lifetime, from this gritty artist-run place to what it is now, which is so chic and fabulous and amazing. It’s so incredible that everybody who moves here feels that they have a piece of the city and that they can leave some kind of print on it, even if that print is washed away in a couple months.

  • By: Steff Yotka
  • Photographed by: Jeannie Sui Wonders
  • Styled by: Angelina Vitto
  • Creative Direction: Samantha Adler
  • Hair: Sonny Molina / Streeters
  • Makeup: Grey Hoffman
  • Set Design: Liz Mydlowski
  • Production: Jay Chary, Gina Lee / C.A.V.E.
  • Talents: Amber Later / IMG Models, Daisaku Hidaka / DNA Models, Fcukers, Grey Hoffman / No Agency, Memphy / IMG Models, Nicolaia Rips, Sasha Gordon, Sean-Kierre Lyons, Taylor Jeanne
  • Casting: Greg Krelenstein / gk-ld
  • Photo Assistant: Avery Norman
  • Styling Assistant: Shannon Gorman, Hannah Shevlin
  • Hair Assistant: Kam Korderz
  • Makeup Assistant: Kye Quinlann
  • Production Assistant: Kendrick Shoji
  • Date: September 6, 2024

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Originally posted from “SSENSE” by Steff Yotka

Cometrend Staff
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