DSCENE Magazine’s Defiance Issue launches with a striking custom cover by Ethiopian-born American artist Awol Erizku, titled “Fr33mind Freestyle.” This issue is a meditation on what it means to defy when the old rules no longer hold, when the world’s systems are cracking and shifting beneath us. Defiance, for us, is not a fleeting trend but a vital tool for survival, reinvention, and beauty in resistance. In an era of ecological crisis, political turmoil, and unraveling power structures, we no longer ask who dares to defy, we ask who doesn’t. Defiance now lives in the everyday: in how we create, dress, love, resist, and refuse to look away.
PRE-ORDER IN PRINT AND DIGITAL
Erizku’s cover art embodies this spirit. His work, which he describes as “Afro-esotericism,” draws on diasporic traditions and myth, refusing to flatten narratives or conform to art historical constraints. “To reclaim space, I wield defiance like a sword,” Erizku tells DSCENE. “It’s about dismantling the canon’s gatekeepers and replacing their myths with our truths.” His practice, spanning photography, sculpture, painting, and more, resists categorization and insists on self-definition, using beauty as both invitation and provocation.
To reclaim space, I wield defiance like a sword.
– Awol Erizku.
“Fr33mind Freestyle,” created in isolation in Los Angeles, weaves Pan-African iconography and personal narrative into a still life that resists the commodification of the Black body. As Erizku puts it, “The aesthetic is the bait; the politics, the blade.” For our Defiance Issue, presence is everything: grace in disobedience, art in refusal, and a future built by those who break away from the expected.