The video features Tyshawn Jones, Kader Sylla, Ben Kadow, Troy Gipson, Sully Cormier, Seven Strong, Kris Brown, Nik Stain, Auguste Bouznad, Caleb Barnett, Aidan Mackey, Rowan Zorilla, Vincent Touzery, Sean Pablo, Sage Elsesser, Beatrice Domond and Mark Gonzales.
Filmed by William Strobeck, Johnny Wilson, Alex Greenberg and Ryan Garshell.
Play Dead (2022)Supreme2022-12-01 | Directed by William Strobeck.
The video features Tyshawn Jones, Kader Sylla, Ben Kadow, Troy Gipson, Sully Cormier, Seven Strong, Kris Brown, Nik Stain, Auguste Bouznad, Caleb Barnett, Aidan Mackey, Rowan Zorilla, Vincent Touzery, Sean Pablo, Sage Elsesser, Beatrice Domond and Mark Gonzales.
Filmed by William Strobeck, Johnny Wilson, Alex Greenberg and Ryan Garshell.Hajjis (2024)Supreme2024-09-25 | Filmed by Hidji World in Harlem, NY.
Featuring Pop Vazquez.Thrasher (2024)Supreme2024-09-23 | Directed by Johnny Wilson.
Featuring Rowan Zorilla, Kevin Bradley, Ben Kadow, Troy Gipson, Vince Palmer, Casper Brooker, Stu Graham, and Neckface.
Filmed by Johnny Wilson, Alex Greenberg, and Grant Dawson.Dave Navarro (2024)Supreme2024-09-18 | ...Chicago (2024)Supreme2024-09-17 | Filmed by William Strobeck and Alex Greenberg.
Featuring Patrick O’Mara, Kader Sylla, Kris Brown, Josh Kalis, and Aidan Mackey.Aldo Drudi (2024)Supreme2024-09-03 | ...Tyler, The Creator (2024)Supreme2024-08-16 | ...ICEE Slushie Machine (2024)Supreme2024-06-12 | ...Where the shoes at? (2024)Supreme2024-04-28 | Filmed by William Strobeck.
The video features Vince Palmer, Nils Matijas, Troy Gipson, Seven Strong, and Rachid Doubiani.Leaktite Bucket (2024)Supreme2024-04-19 | ...A Guy Called Gerald (2024)Supreme2024-04-11 | ...LATE NIGHT SPECIAL (2024)Supreme2024-03-22 | Directed by William Strobeck.
The video features Tyshawn Jones, Troy Gipson, and Ben Kadow.
Filmed by William Strobeck in Shanghai, China.Pressure Washer ft. Mister Cartoon (2024)Supreme2024-03-12 | ...Christ the Redeemer (2024)Supreme2024-02-14 | ...Supreme Los Angeles (2024)Supreme2024-02-05 | Filmed by William Strobeck.
The video features Mark Gonzales, Zion Effs, Rowan Zorilla, and Kader Sylla.South Ferry (2017)Supreme2024-01-26 | ...Gundam (2021)Supreme2024-01-12 | ...Pitch Grips ft. Masahiro Tanaka (2023)Supreme2023-12-07 | ...Yule Log (2020)Supreme2023-12-01 | ...spin the block (2023)Supreme2023-11-21 | Filmed by William Strobeck.
The video features Kader Sylla, Patrick O'Mara, and Seven Strong.Animal for Supreme (2019)Supreme2023-11-17 | Directed by Ben Solomon.how to make a hot dog (2023)Supreme2023-10-20 | Filmed by William Strobeck.
The video features Caleb Barnett, Sully Cormier, Ben Kadow, Patrick O'Mara, Troy Gipson, Aidan Mackey and Kader Sylla.Swizz Beatz (2023)Supreme2023-10-14 | ...Mark Leckey (2023)Supreme2023-09-13 | Mark Leckey/Supreme
Turner Prize-winning British artist Mark Leckey was born in 1964 and grew up on the outskirts of Liverpool in a working-class family. At 15, Leckey left school, but later attended art college in Newcastle before moving to London in 1997. As a teenager, he came to identify with the Casuals – local factions of young soccer fanatics who sought out designer leisure and sportswear. “It was a kind of dressing up, a disguise,” Leckey has said of the Casuals, “a means of using style to transform yourself.”
Leckey’s early understanding of the power of image and shared experience deeply informs his artistic practice. Incorporating video, sculpture, sound, installation and performance, Leckey explores British culture through a distinctly emotional framework. His artworks have examined the relationships between youth, class, public space, popular media and technology, while considering the impacts of nostalgia and memory, both personal and collective.
In 1999, Leckey debuted his seminal video essay, Fiorucci Made Me Hardcore – a compilation of found footage chronicling British dance movements from the 1970s to 1990s. The film collages clips from discos, raves, and the emergent Northern soul scene, yet is united by an abstract, almost melancholic soundtrack. The work’s title, Leckey has said, posits that "something as trite and throwaway and exploitative as a jeans manufacturer can be taken by a group of people and made into something totemic, and powerful, and life-affirming."she loves me, she loves me not. (2023)Supreme2023-08-28 | Directed by William Strobeck.
The video features Troy Gipson, Yuto Horigome, Caleb Barnett, Vincent Touzery, and Mustapha Salem.
Filmed by William Strobeck and Augustin Giovannoni in Paris, France.PIGGY (2023)Supreme2023-08-23 | Directed by William Strobeck.
The video features Caleb Barnett, Seungwook Jee, Troy Gipson, Rowan Zorilla, Mark Gonzales, Nik Stain, Kader Sylla, Patrick O’Mara, Kris Brown, Seven Strong, Jun Kummer, Sully Cormier, Chansuk Hong, Ben Kadow, Sun Woo Moon, Eugene Choi, and Juwon Eun.
Filmed by William Strobeck, Johnny Wilson, and Alex Greenberg in Seoul, South Korea.Buju Banton (2019)Supreme2023-07-30 | ...Water Lots (2018)Supreme2023-07-16 | Directed by Sean Vegezzi.Aerial (2011)Supreme2023-07-02 | Directed by Ben Solomon for Supreme.HoodFishing Entertainment (2023)Supreme2023-06-22 | ...GZA (2018)Supreme2023-06-18 | ...LOVE REIGNS SUPREME (2021)Supreme2023-06-16 | ...Damien Hirst (2009)Supreme2023-05-22 | British artist Damien Hirst was born in 1965 in Bristol, England.
During the 1990s Hirst was known as a wild child in the art world and his work embodied both everyday realism and provocative sensationalism. Known for his ironic wit and cultural commentary, Hirst often explores the theme of mortality through a variety of mediums and techniques from installation work, to painting and sculpture.
A series utilizing preserved dead animals suspended in formaldehyde (including a shark, a sheep and a cow) catapulted Hirst to fame amidst controversy. The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living, a 14-foot tiger shark immersed in a glassed display case of formaldehyde became the iconic work of British art in the 1990s. Its sale in 2004 made Hirst the world’s second most expensive living artist after Jasper Johns.Crop Fields (2017)Supreme2023-05-07 | Directed by Ben Solomon.Singing Machine ft. 645AR (2023)Supreme2023-03-08 | ...Pope.L (2022)Supreme2023-02-02 | American artist Pope.L was born in Newark, NJ in 1955. He began graduate studies at Rutgers in the late 1970s, developing an interest in experimental theater and performance. His actions largely occur in public and municipal spaces — many of which have taken place in New York, including at Tompkins Square Park and outside of a midtown Chase Bank. Referring to himself as “a fisherman of social absurdity,” Pope.L has employed a variety of strategies to explore complicity, power, race, class, gender, and embodiment. His work spans theater, intervention, painting, drawing, sculpture, installation, writing and video. It is at turns provocative, absurd, disruptive and vulnerable.
Some of Pope.L’s most well-known work are his arduous “crawls,” a series of street performances enacted over four decades. He first crawled across 42nd Street in 1978, inspired by growing numbers of unhoused people sleeping on the street. In re-focusing collective attention on his own body moving through space horizontally, he considered “all those folks, who seemed inert and unwilling to lift themselves up by their bootstraps, starting to move as one,” and how such refusal to move up contains “this energy of moving forward.”
Between 2001 and 2009, Pope.L incrementally crawled 22 miles up Broadway, from the tip of Manhattan to the South Bronx, wearing a Superman costume and a skateboard on his back. These actions pose important cultural and historical questions. What gestures are accepted in what spaces? Whose gestures are accepted in whose spaces? How does a space frame an action? “As soon as you go outside, there’s this issue of where you are in space, and who owns that space,” Pope.L has said. “So I realized that I was setting up a tension when I crawled about being in space and how you’re located in that space – how you’re supposed to behave in that space, and who can own that space, and how you can own it.”Clayton Patterson (2021)Supreme2023-02-02 | Clayton Patterson – an artist, photographer and videographer known for documenting the unique character of Manhattan’s Lower East Side – was born in Canada in 1948. Patterson taught art at universities across Canada before moving to New York City in 1979 with partner and fellow artist Elsa Rensaa. In 1983, Patterson and Rensaa purchased 161 Essex St., a former dressmaker’s shop, where they still live and work.
In the mid-80s, Patterson and Rensaa’s storefront became the de-facto home of Clayton Caps. Using a 100-year-old embroidery machine, Rensaa chainstitched Patterson’s folkloric illustrations onto wide-brim baseball caps. Clayton Caps became ubiquitous throughout Lower Manhattan, and their distinctive style has since been widely adopted. 161 Essex also served as a gallery, featuring work by artists like Dash Snow, Boris Lurie, Jerry Pagane, LA2, Genesis Breyer P-Orridge, local bikers and religious worshipers.
Patterson and Rensaa have amassed an immense archive of their adopted neighborhood’s social, cultural and underground histories. It includes thousands of photographs and countless hours of video footage, as well as creative detritus they’ve collected from the street. “The history of the Lower East Side is dense, multicultural and diverse. There are multiple layers within the community. You had Jews, Asians, Puerto Ricans, Dominicans, avant-garde filmmakers, tattoo parlors, the gay clubs, the art scene. It takes having documented all these different circles to get how they connected,” said Patterson.
For decades, Patterson has engaged with neighbors from these cross-cultural communities. He's captured defining events (video footage of police brutality during the Tompkins Square Park Police Riot) and every-day joy (portraits of local kids posed outside his door). Patterson and Rensaa’s home and work are monuments to their neighborhood’s renegade history and spirit.Joel-Peter Witkin (2020)Supreme2023-02-02 | American artist Joel-Peter Witkin is renowned for creating imagery which disrupts conventional notions of mortality, desire and spirituality. Drawing from a wide range of sources — including early photographic history and Daguerreotype techniques, religion, and painting ranging from Caravaggio and Giotto to Picasso and Balthus — Witkin develops elaborate, surreal scenes that feature people often relegated to society’s margins, as well as cadavers and dismembered limbs.
Born in Brooklyn in 1939, Witkin’s dark sensibilities were formed during childhood. He witnessed a fatal car accident at a young age in which a girl was decapitated. Growing up he collected news clippings about outcasts and illnesses; as a teen in the mid-1950s, used his first camera to document Coney Island sideshow performers. In the 1960s, Witkin served as a photographer during the Vietnam War. After being honorably discharged he became the official photographer for “City Walls, NYC”; an organization that produced murals throughout the five boroughs. He studied sculpture at Cooper Union in 1974 and was granted a fellowship in poetry from Columbia University. In 1976 he moved to New Mexico, and earned a MFA in photography from the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, where he currently lives and works.
Witkin employs a variety of techniques in creating his images — piercing and scratching the negatives, and experimenting with various techniques during the printing process. By centering and eroticizing deformity and the macabre, Witkin’s transgressive images challenge the viewers’ perceptions of beauty. Witkin has said his work, "reflects the insanity of life."Katt Williams (2020)Supreme2023-02-02 | ...Martin Wong (2019)Supreme2023-02-02 | Martin Wong as told by Chris “Daze” Ellis and Lee Quiñones. Original video by Charlie Ahearn.
Chinese-American artist Martin Wong was born in 1946 and raised in San Francisco. In 1968, Wong earned a degree in ceramics from Humboldt State University, where he enrolled in every art course available. After college, he designed sets, props and flyers for radical queer performance art troupes The Cockettes and Angels of Light. Wong moved to New York City in 1978. He lived and worked in an SRO hotel near the South Street Seaport before settling in Loisaida – the Lower East Side’s historic Hispanic enclave – in 1982.
Overlooking his adopted neighborhood from a six-floor walkup on Ridge St., Wong documented the vibrancy and desolation of life in mid-80s Loisaida. Informed by his ceramics training, he developed a meticulous painting technique to realistically render the neighborhood’s brick buildings. Wong also developed a collaborative relationship with Nuyorican poet and playwright Miguel Piñero, whose experiences in prison and on the streets profoundly shaped Wong’s work and romantic outlook. Obsessed by codes of communication, Wong energized his artworks with Piñero’s poetry, Zodiac constellations, calligraphy, newspaper headlines, sign language alphabets, hand-painted signs and graffiti. “Basically, I’m a Chinese landscape painter,” Wong told the East Village Eye in 1984. “If you look at all the Chinese landscapes in the museums, they have writing in the sky. They write a poem in the sky and I do that, too.” Additionally, Wong was a strong supporter of New York graffiti writers. In 1989, he co-founded the short-lived Museum of American Graffiti on Bond St., and later donated his extensive graffiti collection — including work by Daze and Lee Quiñones, among many others — to the Museum of the City of New York.
In 1994, after learning he was HIV positive, Wong returned to San Francisco to receive treatment. There, he made paintings depicting the Chinatown of his youth, and continued building a vast antique collection with his mother, Florence. In 1999, Wong passed away from AIDS-related complications; he was 53-years-old. His paintings, wrote curator Barry Blinderman, “charted a world of unquenchable desire – the steadily burning flame of unrequited love, the junkie’s endless craving for oblivion, the poet’s wheel of misfortune, the alchemist or astrologer’s quest for meaning in the elements and stars.”Neil Young (2015)Supreme2023-02-02 | ...Toshio Maeda (2015)Supreme2023-02-02 | Born in 1953, Toshio Maeda is an erotic manga artist who was prolific in the 80s and 90s. In 1986, he created his infamous work, Urotsukidōji: Legend of the Overfiend establishing him as the pioneer of the genre known as Hentai.