
Kwon Ji-Yong a.k.a. G-Dragon – a twenty-five-year-old man from Seoul with an androgynous look and bleached hair – is the biggest Asian pop star of the moment. Discovered by a talent scout when he was 5 years old, he officially made his debut in 2006 as a member of Big Bang, the boy band that is the star of K-Pop, the South Korean music scene that has won over the world with a blend of Euro dance music, urban rhythms, and bubblegum pop.
Besides his success with Big Bang, he also had two hit solo albums: Heartbreaker in 2009 and the recent Coup d’état, besides several other additional projects. His fame is not only due to music, but also to his style and mysterious and almost other-worldly charisma that have made him the idol of thousands of teens and the muse of designers and art directors.
G-Dragon looks like he came right out of a sci-fi anime: he resembles the romantic interstellar pirate Captain Harlock and, like him, he loves black. You usually see him dressed in leather and slouching with a lock of hair covering his eyes. K-Pop became famous in the West only recently, thanks to Psy and his crazy Gangnam Style song, but G-Dragon is far from the caricature-like figure of his colleague, even though both artists are with the same record company YG Entertainment.
K-Pop is mainly for a younger crowd with cute, catchy tunes about saccharin-sweet teen love stories and evenings hanging out with friends or going to the mall. And yet, the more it clashes with western culture, the more it changes, and G-Dragon is proof. What is most striking is how K-Pop metabolizes Western youth subcultures and borrows elements and symbols of rock-n-roll, punk, Goth, club culture and hip-hop.
The alliance with American hip-hop, in particular, is starting to give its first results. Recent examples are the collaborations between Kanye West and Jyj, will.i.am and 2NE1, and Lil’ Kim and Se7en, while G-Dragon’s latest album also features the participation of Diplo and Missy Elliott who joined him on the stage of K-Con in Los Angeles, the first K-Pop convention in the States. The occasion was Niliria, a Korean folk song with a rapper twist.
“I was looking for someone who was already an established artist, not a newcomer,” says G-Dragon. “I invited Missy Elliot because I’ve always been a fan of hers and she luckily accepted immediately. She was on a hiatus from work for personal reasons and was a bit concerned about how the public would react seeing her on stage after so much time. The result was phenomenal and it was an honor for me and an amazing learning experience”.
G-Dragon fell in love with hip-hop as a child by listening to Wu-Tang Clan. When he was thirteen, he started writing and singing his first rap songs. Someone at YG Entertainment noticed his talent and immediately had him “study” the subject. With Big Bang, G-Dragon was the rapper of the group. He has a crown tattoo on his forearm resembling the ones that Jean-Michel Basquiat painted on the walls of New York, and someone has even compared him to A$AP Rocky.
G-Dragon’s story is less similar to the Harlem rapper’s than it is to that of Justin (Timberlake or Bieber: take your pick), whose vocal talent and adolescent allure were skillfully cultivated by showbiz agents. Like them, the young Ji-Yong is contrary to the idea of the artist as a product in the hands of the entertainment industry, yet at the same time he realizes how important it is to satisfy the tastes of the public to achieve success. “I had to change a lot of things about me,” he admits, “including the tone of my voice”.
Proof of his versatility is Crooked, another hit from his latest CD. This time the theme has a punk vibe, but from a broader perspective. In the video he provocatively wanders through the alleys of Brick Lane, the famous London hipster spot, accompanied by a gang of rockabillies. He alternates T-shirts featuring the Sex Pistols and Black Flag (which bears the phrase Rich Kids instead of the band’s name) with a dusty blue double-breasted suit and vaguely punk outfits.
Having a carefully groomed image is a priority in a K-Pop show, and fashion and set design play a crucial role. With G-Dragon, these elements find a perfect balance. In fact, the young star recently won the prestigious Style Icon Award, prevailing over several Korean stars and co-nominees, and he was also the star of an exhibit at Cais Gallery in Seoul with brand new photographs, memorabilia, and stage costumes. His image races across the maxi-screens that are all over Asian cities and on thousands of Smartphones around the globe. Fans are bewitched by his surreal aura that makes G-Dragon the perfect pop star for the global society of the post-digital era: he’s so perfect that some may even wonder if he’s real.
L'Uomo Vogue, November 2013 (n. 445)
Fashion Assistant Kim Ah Reum
Hair Stylist Kim Tae Hyun@Leekaja Hairbis
Makeup artist Heakyung Lim
Fashion editor Summer Bomi Kim
Fashion stylist Geeun
Photo by Hong Jang Hyun
DI FRANCESCO SPAMPINATO
PUBLISHED: 11/13/2013 - 05:00
- See more at: http://www.vogue.it/en/uomo-vogue/cover-story/2013/11/g-dragon#ad-image309942


Source: vogue.it
I was so sure someone had submitted this.
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Date: 2013-11-13 05:08 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-11-13 05:09 pm (UTC)HE he is SOO fucking flawfree
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Date: 2013-11-13 05:15 pm (UTC)props on vogue to not just feature east asian states for an asian issue
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Date: 2013-11-13 05:19 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-11-13 09:35 pm (UTC)....what when where how behind am i what
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Date: 2013-11-13 05:33 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-11-13 05:39 pm (UTC)yes
yes
I have yet to read the article but I'm already super excited about it, love the pics, love the cover especially, love the fact that gd is on l'uomo vogue. basically love this.
Can gd please always do fashion shoots, thank you.
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Date: 2013-11-13 06:23 pm (UTC)He has a crown tattoo on his forearm resembling the ones that Jean-Michel Basquiat painted on the walls of New York I think 'vip symbol' is the word you're looking for instead?
“I had to change a lot of things about me,” he admits, “including the tone of my voice”. I want to read more about that. Anyone have an idea how he changed his voice? Or some other things?
Fans are bewitched by his surreal aura that makes G-Dragon the perfect pop star for the global society of the post-digital era: he’s so perfect that some may even wonder if he’s real. lmao no lack of praise from this author, but I love it when people are like that about him so :')
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Date: 2013-11-13 10:19 pm (UTC)I'm not sure what is the whole context of his answer this time. But in the past GD has commentated in interviews about how he had a period where he had to change his rapper voice due the criticism some people use to made about his voice . You know, that it was too thin, shrill, robotic, the usual criticize he still had nowadays. And I think you can notice, if i'm not mistaking, the music around 2008-2009 (specially at the Remember album) he use a tone more low at his rapping, closer to his talking voice (I loved it by the way). Fortunately, it seems he doesn't care about what people said/think anymore so he just rap/sing the way he feel it.
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Date: 2013-11-14 07:14 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-11-13 06:39 pm (UTC)I love it~
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Date: 2013-11-13 07:59 pm (UTC)Looking gorg GD, but you already know that.
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Date: 2013-11-13 10:26 pm (UTC)I'm glad he get the credit enough to snatch a L'UOMO VOGUE cover, the article is nice too.
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Date: 2013-11-13 11:11 pm (UTC)His bone structure is amazing.
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Date: 2013-11-14 02:42 am (UTC)I think she definitely has a point.
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Date: 2013-11-14 04:20 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-11-14 06:46 pm (UTC)ugh girl no