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underground Tag

17 Aug

Photos of blinged-out queers at underground Latin club 2CPerrea

Last weekend, at an industrial estate in Tottenham, people stuck gaffer tape on their nipples and arched their backs. There, a disused automotive garage-turned-warehouse played host to the ascendant club night 2CPerrea, where people wear shirred playsuits and leopard-print belt skirts and skank vests with the word “maricon” (meaning faggot in Spanish) embroidered across their fronts. Staged in collaboration with Popola UK, partygoers whined to the seductive electronica and jacked-up dembow of Latin America’s perreo subculture. “Perreo is about dancing along with your friends and smiling at them. It’s about being free and moving your body,” the night’s organisers explain. “Especially your ass.”“At 2CPerrea, fashion and freedom go together. The main target is on creating the best atmosphere for everybody...
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11 Aug

Photos of the ‘silly fashion bimbos’ at underground rave

One in every of fashion’s longest-standing trends is misnaming brand-sponsored activations as “raves”. Season after season, fashion publicists will host fashion week afterparties in TimeOut venues where editor-influencers talk a bit while LSDXOXO, Richie Hawtin, or OnlyFire perform within the background. Fashion likes to align itself with the underground, but sometimes a club is only a club. “They all the time feel so serious, too,” the organisers of London’s fashion-pilled OPIA rave say over DM. “You may be camp and queer and playful while still being editorial. That’s what we’re all about. OPIA was born out of the need to showcase this queer subculture as one of the crucial progressive and non-conformist on this planet.” Mascotted by two blonde-wigged, brainless broads...
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9 Sep

Intimate portraits of NYC’s underground burlesque community

“The allure of burlesque is its message of acceptance,” explains Latest York-based photographer Natalia Neuhaus. “It’s a judgment-free zone, it provides a protected space where you might be capable of explore your sensuality through dance and teaches you that sensuality can't be defined by age, a selected variety of body, or gender. Every thing we learned growing up about sex appeal and who it should belong to is challenged by every act. The media and the promoting industry proceed to idealise a selected variety of body and glamorise white cis straight people but burlesque is the counterculture to this dominant fallacy.”Having been brought up in what she describes as a “conservative Latin household” with a devoutly religious mother and a...
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