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Iconic New York Corners on Prada Mode

The Hotel Chelsea makes a perfect location to narrate a reflection on public, domestic, and intimate environments, balancing private spaces and collective accessibility. Perhaps Refn and Kojima could have been strangers in a shared lobby space, but as fate would have it, the two share a friendship that isn’t deterred by cultural nuances, foreign dialects, or tens of thousands of miles. Their collaboration is one rooted in pure creativity, not bound by technicalities such as language but encouraged by raw feeling. Together, their dialogue explores the shared fundamental need to create and the failure encoded in the process of creation, experiences that define humanity and our approach to art.

 

As the city’s beacon for the aspiring creative community and symbol of cultural intersection, the hotel hosts the two day series of exclusive programming. Programming features the Prada Mode Channel, a bespoke broadcast in the vein of a cable station. In collaboration with journalist and TV-host, Mikael Bertelsen, the variety of programs invoke analog television troupes from talk shows to horoscopes to music performances. The channel acts as a portal to Satellites II, reiterating the 1970s-80s as a potent element to American culture. As a similar homage, a screening curated by the two will display three cult classics Japanese anime films at the Angelika Film Center during one of the following days open for the public.

 

Satellites II continued on-site for public view at The Hotel Chelsea, Prada Broadway, and Kat’z Delicatessen. Two futuristic television stands depict Refn and Kojima, who are in conversation. A huge chrome Prada vending machine glows white light and gifts guests exclusive Prada Mode merchandise. At Kat'z Deli, guests also receive a treat from Juno the Bakery, a Copenhagen delicacy (Refn's home country). During the exclusive first night, Kat'z Deli flipped over the tables to reveal a dancefloor lit by the restaurant's neon signs. The multiday event blended public spaces with private exclusivity, not hindering the flow of the space’s intended market but honoring human entanglement. The creative installations bypass origin and intention, place and time, such as the historic spaces they were held in. 

Hideo Kojima, Sophie Thatcher, Nicolas Winding Refn
Lydia Lunch
Papi Juice
Hunter Schafer
Liv & Lola Corafixen
Hideo Kojima & Nicolas Winding Refn

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