Stay informed on our latest news!
Sign up for our newsletter
Every inch of the venue was filled with fiery competitors, spanning across many different age ranges. In the pit of the stage, the contestants competed, but in the end, Joshua Pena and Isis Granda ended up winning the cyphers. The winners will head to the National Finals in Orlando for workshops and panels on August 20th. Tune in live to see the national finals happening this weekend in Orlando below. The B-girls final will take place Saturday, August 21 and the B-boys finals will take place, Sunday August 22.
The Whitney Review Dares, Delights, and Surprises in Second Issue
Flipping open the centerfold spread of the publication leads to an instantly iconic, playful advertisement of the Telfar x Ugg collaboration featuring two subjects in a tender moment, sharing a puckered-up kiss over an ATM, hands gloved by miniature Telfar boots. A sign for downtown institution Lucien hangs above the cowboy hats of our two lovers.
The creative ethos of the magazine speaks for itself here: cultural references that convey a fusion of impactful emotions and storytelling in the same breath.
“This issue is about desperation, excess, romance, and grief,” editor-in-chief Whitney Mallet shares in bold lettering on the front cover. Aptly named, the issue includes reviews of books like Megan Fox’s Pretty Boys Are Poisonous, a series of poems that serve as a raw confessional of sadness and heartbreak. Reviewer Esra Soraya Padgett called it, “an achievement to perform vengeance without bitterness … Jennifer’s Body fatale.”
Maya Martinez took the stage for the first act of the night, presenting her show “Hole Play," produced under Wonder Press. Stepping into a Party City parking lot in central Florida, the character finds herself confrontng a dramatic sinkhole. A frantic dialogue unfolds, exploring themes of identity, sinkhole insurance, sexuality, and the layers of the Earth’s crust, much to the fascination of the gathered audience.
Stephen Phillips-Horst followed with a sweeping commentary on consumer culture and capitalism, featured on page 15 of the magazine under “Express (Train) Yourself, On Desperate, Sassy, Authentic Subway Ad Copy."
As guests sipped tequila sodas and perused fresh magazine copies, the next reader, Alissa Bennet, tactfully removed her gum and placed it on the edge of a Diet Coke can. Her contribution revolves around the dramatic tale of Myspace scene queen Kiki Cannibal, with further inquiries directed to her latest work, the Taxidermist’s Handbook.
Cristine Brache went on to share concise yet gripping poetry, featured on page 29, while Orlando Estrada presented the aforementioned sound performance to close the show.
The intentionality of the magazine was evident at the launch, from the saddle-stitched newsprint to the inclusion of interview content on the front cover. Mallet described these choices as both intuitive and rooted in her early experiences with alt weeklies, including the one she wrote for in her hometown.
“It was important for me to do it in print and off-screen, to give people a special reading experience. I want readers to be able to throw it in their bag and read on the train, or take to the pool, to be accessible essentially,” she shared.
Mallet’s career in the city — and on the internet, if you will — has blossomed fervently since her move after her college years in Montreal. She has held editor roles at PIN-UP (with founder Felix Burrichter in the audience at the launch), GAYLETTER, contributed the book Deliverance published by Smutburger Editions, and amassed a rich wealth of performances and bylines from Artnet to Interview and beyond.
Amidst the nasty weather and grey sentiments of last February in New York, Mallet sat down and plotted the beginnings of The Whitney Review. Reflecting on her magazine experience and her role in the broader media ecosystem, she developed a framework that would eventually become the namesake publication.
Asking peers for advice transformed into their generous offerings of work and support. The brief review model, comfortably settling within the periodical’s pages (mostly under 200 words), is a deliberate choice by Mallet. She explained that it’s the perfect cocktail for conveying a new work in an entertaining yet timely way: “I’m always reading a book that I want to give a little shine to and put in the discourse.”
There’s a distinctly human throughline in The Whitney Review. Real-world relationships weave into the magazine’s worldbuilding in a fated fashion. Prounis, an advertiser featured beneath Em Brill’s comprehensive dialogue on Andy Warhol and Edie Sedgwick, was connected to Mallet through a writing workshop with a member of its team. The choice of venue for the launch was determined after a dance performance years ago with gallery owner Sarah Blazej (the choreographer of that performance, Sigrid Lauren, was also present on launch night).
“A lot of the time, I feel like I’ve done all these things and they don’t work together. But as I’ve created this container, all the projects I’ve worked on begin to make sense,” Mallet explained.
As guests spitballed on where to take the festivities at the night’s end, she buzzed around the room bidding goodbye to friends and readers. While the potential themes and advertisers of the next issue are still under wraps, it was clear that night that the community around the magazine is firm and growing. Wherever Mallet takes The Whitney Review next, we’re certainly sure to follow.
Recommended articles
The Abloh Invitational Hits the Decks at Art Basel
The Abloh Invitational wasn’t their only event during Art Basel. Beginning on Dec. 7, they displayed the Atiba Jefferson: Skate Photography Edition curated by Architecture in collaboration with Jefferson and powered by OTW by Vans. For the first time in Jefferson’s 25-year career as a photographer, documentarian, and skater, he created a reflective project of his documented achievements. The exhibition displayed over 100 photos of Jefferson’s most notable photos including Tony Hawk, Kareem Campbell, Eric Koston, and more.
“If I have to describe how I feel about this show it’s filled all the way up with love that I have received from everyone who attended the show,” says Jefferson. “Eight months ago when Mahfuz, Chloe and Henry from Architecture asked me to do this show I was so honored. When we worked in the past with Virgil I always felt like we were making magic and I knew they would bring that to this show.”
The Future Is Efron: Efron Danzig
I met Efron initially through Supreme filmmaker Bill Strobeck, who welcomed her into the roster of his new brand and skate team, Violet. Beyond the skate world, Danzig has walked a Marni show, starred in a Calvin Klein campaign, authored a poetry book, and showcased her work with the Daisies series in Paris, Biarritz, New York and Tokyo.
Putting together this 20th anniversary issue with a special focus on New York, Danzig seemed an obvious choice to feature as the exciting and inspiring future of our hometown.
EFRON wears SWEATSHIRT, SKIRT, UNDERWEAR, SHOES by ALEXANDER WANG, SHIRT, SUNGLASSES by BALENCIAGA, BAG by GUCCI
[Originally published in office magazine Issue 20, Fall-Winter 2023. Order your copy here]
Paige Silveria— How are you? What have you been up to?
Efron Danzig— I’m pretty good. I just started barbacking at a burlesque club; it makes me want to perform. I also assisted this photographer Jimi [Franklin] the other day, just trying to learn what I can from him. I met him on a shoot recently. His photos are really soft. [Shows images by the photographer]
PS— Reminds me of The Panic in Needle Park, the coloring and tone.
ED— Yeah I know exactly what you mean. I want to shoot more like that. It’s nice to be learning since I’m not going to school or anything.
PS— I think that’s the way to do it. How long have you been in this apartment?
ED— Since April. I’ve just been subletting it from a friend. It’s fun to have my own apartment. Also cool to have space to make art. I’m about to move spots again soon, but I don’t know where in New York yet.
PS— It feels a bit like being in a Jarmusch apartment. It’s very old New York and cozy, chaotic in a good way.
ED— It’s usually not this messy, but I’ve had a lot of people stay with me over the past two weeks. I need to clean that couch. There are clothes all over my room because I’ve been taking a lot of photos of my friends there. I just end up throwing things around and then leaving for the night. Been taking a lot of self-portraits here too. Just setting up lamps and putting clothes over them to make the lighting certain colors. I’ve been watching a lot of movies and trying to emulate the look. I really love Jim Jarmusch’s films, specifically Night on Earth.
PS— I think you’ve definitely achieved that. Tell me about the self-portraits.
ED— [Showing some images on the computer]. This one I was experimenting with the lighting in the different rooms and the background and trying to see what silhouettes look good. It’s fun to just get high and play dress up. Learn things by trial and error, seeing what works and what doesn’t. I started taking self-portraits out of curiosity. Like, what do I even look like? What happens if I do this? Or that? It’s easy to test things on myself. Here’s photos of this weird dude I saw on the bus and then he played a ukulele on the beach in a cheetah-print speedo.
PS— I love him! Speaking of your trial-and-error navigation, I interviewed this iconic, celebrated photographer who’s in her 70s for a magazine a while back. She was pretty terrifying to speak with actually. But it was interesting to hear that she’d never learned how to properly use her camera. She’d always just winged it and still to this day does.
ED— Like an outsider artist, I’ve always found that really interesting. I have no idea what I’m doing. So it’s fun to just figure shit out or ask my friends for help — I ask them for help a lot. I’m really inspired by so many of my friends here. I feel like I have a lot to learn from them.
PS— Yeah, I find outsider artwork especially intriguing — what people come up with when they aren’t aware of what’s expected, the rules and what’s come before. Tell me about where you grew up.
ED— I was born and lived in New York City until I was seven. Then my parents split. My mom moved to Philadelphia and my dad stayed here. I went back and forth until I was 10. Then I was mostly in and around Philly until last August, when I moved back to New York, a year ago around this time.
PS— Were you always so creative?
ED— I wasn’t! I was always a weirdo though. I think I always had ideas but didn’t know how to communicate them until I was much much older. I pretty much only skated from 10 until 12 years old, and then didn’t start again until I was 16. I was just a little dork playing video games all day. I’m still a little dork though. I was super antisocial at that time, then when I was 16 I started going out and making friends, going to shows. The shows really got me out of my shell. But mostly I just skated and didn’t do much else until I got hurt badly the first time when I was 18. Then I had to develop other hobbies. I wanted to find other ways to express myself. So I just tried out stuff to see what I liked. A few have stuck with me over the years.
EFRON wears UNDERWEAR by ARAKS, BELT by DIESEL
EFRON wears BRALETTE by ARAKS, SUNGLASSES by BALENCIAGA
PS— Wait, to quickly go back to video games; have you seen how gamers’ bodies are supposed to deform over time? There was some prediction about how their heads will have a dent from the headphones and their backs are supposed to be all crooked from leaning towards the computer, etc? And some gamers actually buzzed their heads and found the dents! So fucking disturbing.
ED— Wow. I’m thankful I avoided that phase.
PS— Lol, right? Tell me about your experience with modeling and the fashion world.
ED— Oh my god. About two years ago, this casting director DMed me and asked me to do a shoot. I didn’t respond for a bit then hit him back and he asked me to send him a picture of me in my underwear. And so I asked if he wanted me to wear a bra and he was like, “Why would you do that?” Like, “Because I have boobs.” He didn’t realize I was trans. He was like, “Oh my god. I’m so sorry” … Side note, I didn’t grow up thinking I’d be doing this; it wasn’t in the cards for me. So I’m like, “Why the fuck is this dude hitting me up? Is he even a real casting director? Like, what the fuck is a casting director?” Anyways, the first real experience I had with modeling was when Rachel [Chandler] hit me up for a shoot with Jim Goldberg. That was the best. I met a lot of people on that shoot, Zara [Mirkin] and Bobby at Supreme — people I’d get to know over the next few years. I didn’t understand how interconnected everything was in New York. But, yeah, overall I’ve had a good experience in that world. It’s a fun job and I’ve got people I trust looking out for me.
PS— I’m really happy to hear you have a good support system. It’s pretty wild sometimes to realize how interconnected things really are. Someone could be an asshole to you one day and 10 years later they’re the person in charge of a big project you’re working on. You never know. You have to keep your head. Striking that balance is key.
ED— I’ve had to bite my tongue, but I’ve gotten a lot better at sticking up for myself recently.
PS— That’s good. You also walked Marni recently! That’s so exciting.
ED— It’s pretty trippy. I’m lucky to be able to do it. I like to be a character in somebody’s world. The creative director has cool ideas. When I used to play music I would get the same rush, the same kick out of it. Right before I go, I get butterflies and I can’t talk. But then after, it's a release and it feels really good.
PS— You made music?
ED— I used to be in a few bands in Philly. Nowadays, I just finger pick on the guitar by myself. I used to do this thing too sometimes where I read poetry and my friend played upright bass over it. I want to bring that back.
PS— The DIY/punk scene here is pretty quiet these days. There used to be so many more experimental venues, a thriving community.
ED— Yeah, it’s hard for cool spaces to last here. Chaos Computer just closed and there are only so many other community-run spaces. But they exist and shows happen a lot. Like, there's been some pretty sick shows recently.
EFRON wears BODYSUIT by NORMA KAMALI, BELT by DIESEL, JACKET by NINA RICCI, SHOES by MAISON ERNEST, SUNGLASSES by BALENCIAGA
PS— Tell me again about the speech impediment you had when you were young and how your mum just happens to be a therapist and helped heal you?
ED— When I was really young, my mom was the speech pathologist at my school. I would do all these mouth exercises for my speech impediment. I couldn't say “sh” or “r” or “L”. Like if I said “really”, it would sound like “weewee.”
PS— I ran into Bill [Strobeck] the other night and told me to ask you some weird questions. I had no idea what to ask you, that's weird.
ED— The only example I gave Bill was like fucking …
PS— [Laughs] Do you want to talk about fucking?
ED— Actually no, that’s just kind of a joke! I don’t know, I wanted it to be raunchy haha. I’ve only done so many interviews, but I regret doing them all. You’re just always in the present and maybe I just want to exist as that present self. Sometimes you read stuff you said before and it’s funny to have your honest answers out there that maybe have changed.
PS— I get that for sure. But some of the most inspiring things I’ve come across have been Q&As, no matter how long ago they were done. People, when they’re deep in a good conversation, can lend some really pivotal advice, perspectives. It’s cool to contribute for others to take from.
ED— You're right.
PS— Tell me a fun story.
ED— There was a reading at William Burroughs’ bunker a few weeks ago and my friends and I snuck into what I believe to be Mark Rothko’s old studio. We just danced around and filmed silly videos. The walls had paint splattered all over. It was really cute — wait didn’t Burroughs kill somebody?
PS— Yeah, he shot his wife Joan Vollmer in the head accidentally.
ED— Oh yeah, I had a vague memory of reading that on Wikipedia. When I first started reading poetry I was like 17 and my first books I liked were Jack Kerouac’s Scattered Poems and Mexico City Blues. I’m not into that stuff much anymore, but was super inspired by that because they were the only poetry books I had, plus Richard Hell and Patti Smith early on. I still want to get “YOU MAKE ME _____” tattooed even though it’s kinda, ya know … It would be good, right on my rib. Kind of sexy.
PS— You should do it.
ED— So, I met this person in a poetry class before I dropped out. We would hang out all the time and write together. They would critique my poems. It was awesome. They showed me a lot of the poets I’m still really into today. Oh, speaking of, I saw Eileen Myles biking down 7th Street the other day. I was biking the wrong way down the street and I needed to get in and she let me. As I did, I saw who she was and was like, “Oh my god! I am such a big fan!” She kept on biking and yelled back, “Thank ya!” I biked for maybe 30 feet more and then stopped my bike and just started crying. I’d just read an interview with her from Butt Magazine a few days before. Seeing her in person after, just existing, I don’t know why I cried. I couldn’t contain myself. The only celebrity — celebrity to me — that I’ve ever fanned out on like that.
PS— I interviewed Lydia Lunch a while back. We met at a bar and spoke for a few hours. That was really trippy. Back to the Beat Generation, it’s cool that you’re into it. I feel like youth appreciation for that era is waning.
ED— People who write, they probably know who a lot of those people are, but most people probably have no idea. Not that it matters.
PS— Why do you think that is?
ED— I think people don’t read as many books. So they’re not going to know a writer over a TikToker.
EFRON wears COAT, SHOES by RICK OWENS, BIKINI by HEAVEN BY MARC JACOBS
EFRON wears BRA by CHRIS HABANA, PANTS by STELLA MCCARTNEY, SHOES by GIANVITO ROSSI
PS— Same with great filmmakers.
ED— Yeah, but there definitely are a lot of people who know who Wong Kar-wai and Jim Jarmusch are. I’m just into movies because I’ve been injured a lot and my old roommate was a film major, and so was this guy who I used to see. So they were always putting on really good films. Especially now, people are only shown what their algorithm provides. Some people forget that there’s more media to take in than what’s on the Internet. You can read a book; you can go see a film.
PS— Yeah, or even just go down a Wikipedia hole.
ED— Literally I’ll be up at five in the morning, on Wikipedia reading about some random person. You can just nerd out on some poet. It’s fun to look up someone you’re influenced by and read all of their interviews too. But yeah, I need to get away from the computer though. I don’t go in nature nearly enough. I need to clear my head.
PS— I’ve been spending a lot of this summer in the woods. I love taking mushrooms outside, around trees.
ED— I like taking mushrooms, but I just want to feel them — I don’t like to take too much or I get paranoid. Maybe if I take them in the woods I’ll have a better time. I don’t know why I always have them in a party setting.
PS— I want to hear more about the poetry you write.
ED— I actually made a little poetry book recently. My friend Maya [Greenberg] did all the drawings in it. I wanted to make something to put out into the world. Poems just sit there, might as well do something with them.
PS— What do you write about?
ED— Well I never used to write love poems, and I used to not like them. I wanted to read other shit. But this book is all love poems. I’m more romantic now than I used to be … Well I’m also kind of smitten right now and I just upped my estrogen. So super lovey dovey in my feels.
PS— Ah, I love! How’s dating been?
ED— I’m such a romantic. I don’t know. Up and down. I love a gentleman, kinda messy. It’s so hot, so sexy. I know a few good gentlemen … Have you listened to old Beastie Boys, when they were a hardcore band?
PS— No!
ED— They were so sick. [Puts it on] The punk scene is pretty cool here, all across the east coast there are sick bands. I miss playing music. My friend asked me to sing in a band recently. We have to get things together and write some songs. But I do want to just skate a lot right now. Music you can do forever — not that I’m old, but skating you can’t do forever. I got hurt initially two years ago and it took 11 months to heal. And then I could only skate for seven months before I got hurt again. I had a second surgery the day after this shoot and now I’m pretty much healed. I haven’t really been able to skate much these past two years. So I’m excited to do that. And there’s a really cute queer skate scene in Oakland. I want to go there again soon and skate.