: Tracking the timeline of their collaborations, ranging from 2012 to 2020.
Andre Boleyn and Kevin Warhol emerged as quintessential examples of this aesthetic. They represented the maturation of the brand. While early stars paved the way, Boleyn and Warhol brought a level of comfort and candidness that defined the "Golden Age" of the studio’s online presence. They were part of a generation that grew up with the internet, allowing for a more immediate connection with their fanbase. Andre Boleyn Kevin Warhol Part 2 15
Andre Boleyn (1968–2001) is the forgotten third figure of the late-20th-century French cinéma d’exposition movement. Unlike his contemporaries—Pierre Huyghe or Philippe Parreno—Boleyn refused gallery walls. Instead, he produced exactly 17 “living loops”: 16mm films shot in single takes, each exactly 33 minutes long, designed to be projected onto the skin of a moving performer. : Tracking the timeline of their collaborations, ranging
: Some segments featuring the duo were filmed as a "video-collage," with soft-core artistic scenes captured in Bali and more explicit content filmed in Prague to comply with international legal restrictions. While early stars paved the way, Boleyn and
– In Boleyn’s final film Coast Opposite (2000, unfinished), the 15th second of every minute contains a single frame of Kevin Warhol’s face composited over a 16th-century Flemish portrait. The effect is subliminal, discovered only via digital analysis in 2018.