Nahyun and Arin of Atheart have no interest in being palatable. They have interest in being inevitable.
Nahyun & Arin of Atheart
The lights go down before they go up. That is always the moment — the held breath between darkness and ignition, between the girl who practiced a thousand hours in a studio in Gangnam and the creature who materialises in silk and shadow under a single cone of white light. When Nahyun and Arin of Atheart step onto a stage, something else steps with them. Something assembled, deliberate, and ferociously alive.
It is not performance. Or rather: it is performance elevated so far beyond its own mechanics that it transcends the category entirely. It becomes presence. And presence, as any stylist at a Paris atelier will tell you, cannot be manufactured. It can only be cultivated — season by season, outfit by outfit, look by look — until it becomes indistinguishable from the self.
The Architecture of Image
For this issue’s pictorial, Atheart arrived at the studio in Seoul wearing almost nothing fashionable — a quiet entry, a studied anonymity before the transformation. Arin in a slate-grey crewneck, Nahyun in a worn leather jacket over a plain white tee. No performance yet. No look. And then the team moves in: a structured Maison Margiela shoulder on Nahyun, a deconstructed Comme des Garçons silhouette on Arin, and something shifts in the room. A frequency changes. The girls are no longer girls. They are architecture.
This is the central truth about Atheart: they do not wear fashion. They complete it. Their styling — oversized tailoring cut against corseted waists, industrial hardware softened by sheer organza, the violent geometry of a Sacai jacket colliding with the dreamlike drape of a vintage Yohji — reads like thesis statements, not outfits. Each look argues a position. Each silhouette stakes a claim.
“We don’t dress for the camera. We dress for the version of ourselves that exists after the camera turns off” — Nahyun, Atheart
Nahyun’s visual language skews architectural — sharp lapels, elongated proportions, the kind of colour story that risks monochrome and wins. Ivory against alabaster against bone. Her references in conversation move from Helmut Lang to late Kawakubo without missing a beat. She speaks about clothing the way a poet speaks about metre: as constraint that liberates, as form that makes meaning possible.
Arin, by contrast, is the disruption within the discipline. Where Nahyun imposes structure, Arin dissolves it. Her styling instincts run liquid — draped asymmetry, unexpected texture juxtapositions, a pearl choker worn like armour against a deconstructed micro-dress. In last autumn’s comeback stage, she arrived in a custom piece from an emerging Seoul label, Islet, that stopped the internet mid-scroll: a layered tulle skirt in midnight and moss, paired with a tailored smoking jacket two sizes too large. The look went viral within the hour. It was referenced in three separate runway reviews the following week.
Sonic Architecture
Atheart’s music operates inside the same logic as their wardrobe. Their most recent release, “Glass Meridian,” moves through three sonic registers in four minutes: a minimalist synth opening that recalls early Bon Iver; a verse structure built on the kind of polyrhythmic tension you find in late-period FKA twigs; a chorus that drops into something so clean, so ruthlessly melodic, that it becomes impossible not to describe it as pop in the most exalted possible sense of the word. It is genre as architecture. It is sound as silhouette.
The music video — directed by Kim Soo-jin, who has worked with both Bottega Veneta and Dior on short film projects — is forty-seven shots in three and a half minutes. Every frame is a full stop.
The colour grading moves from a cold, almost clinical blue-silver in the opening sequences to a warm amber-gold as the track approaches its resolution, mirroring the harmonic movement of the song itself. It is the kind of attention to detail that makes you wonder how many idol groups have their own internal creative directors. Atheart does. Her name is Nahyun.
“K-pop is not borrowing from high fashion anymore. K-pop is setting the agenda. We just got here first” — Arin, Atheart
This is perhaps the most radical thing about Atheart: the question of authorship. In an industry still largely structured around the hierarchical authority of the agency — where creative decisions flow downward from producers, directors, and A&R — Atheart have, through persistence and cultural leverage, inserted themselves into the process at the point of conception. Not adaptation. Conception. The mood boards for “Glass Meridian” were begun in Nahyun’s apartment eleven months before the release date.
There is a particular sophistication to how Atheart construct and deploy their public selves. The K-pop industry has always understood persona as product — the careful calibration of personality, aesthetic, and narrative that makes an idol legible and loveable to a mass audience. Most groups operate within that grammar. Atheart are rewriting it.
Nahyun’s public persona resists the softness the industry often demands of its women. She is precise, measured, and occasionally withering in her assessments of mediocrity. In a now-legendary live stream segment, she spent six minutes dissecting the colour grading in a competitor’s music video — not cruelly, but with the focused intensity of a film student who has seen too much lazy work. The clip was viewed fourteen million times. Her fandom exploded overnight. This is not the behaviour the old K-pop playbook anticipates. This is the behaviour of an artist who knows exactly who she is and has decided that performing otherwise costs too much.
Arin’s register is different but equally deliberate. She operates in the space between warmth and irony — her social media presence a masterclass in the kind of approachable wit that feels authentic because it is authentic. She once posted a story of herself eating convenience store ramen in full Prada campaign makeup after a fourteen-hour shoot, captioned simply: “haute cuisine.”
It received more engagement than any official promotional post that week. Brand deals followed. Lifestyle content invitations followed. None of it was accidental.
“The girls who inspired us wore the uniform. We are designing a different one. Not for us. For whoever comes after” — Nahyun & Arin, Atheart
The Fandom as Fashion System
To understand Atheart’s cultural influence is to understand the particular alchemy of their fandom, who call themselves Afterglow. Afterglow does not simply consume Atheart’s aesthetic; it extends, remixes, and redistributes it with a fluency that would make most fashion houses envious. Within hours of any public appearance, the fit is catalogued: brand tags, dupe recommendations, styling references, technical breakdowns of the silhouette. The fandom operates like a distributed editorial team — fast, precise, and deeply invested in the integrity of the look.
This is K-pop’s underexamined contribution to global fashion culture: the mobilisation of millions of highly engaged visual consumers who bring the analytical vocabulary of fashion criticism to mass pop.
When Arin wore an unlabelled piece in a fan-filmed backstage clip, Afterglow identified the designer — a graduate student at Hongik University — within twenty minutes. The designer gained forty thousand followers by morning. Atheart’s influence is not downstream from fashion. It is upstream.
The Disruption Arrives
The question the industry keeps circling, nervously, is this: what happens when K-pop’s most aesthetically sophisticated acts begin operating at the same level of intentionality as the luxury houses themselves?
The tension between commerce and artistry — the tension that has defined K-pop since its industrial acceleration in the mid-nineties — is being reframed by a generation of artists who refuse to choose between the two.
Atheart are not anti-commercial. They are post-commercial. They understand the machinery of pop — the algorithms, the streaming metrics, the fanbase management, the branded partnership negotiations — with the same clarity they bring to their visual direction.
They do not resist the system. They have learned to conduct it. And the music, the clothes, the personas they generate within that system are no less true, no less artistically radical, for having been produced inside it.
This is what it looks like, right now, at the edge of where K-pop is going: two women in their early twenties in a Seoul studio, fluent in the language of power and fully fluent in the language of beauty, deciding in real time what the picture should say. It will say exactly what they intend. It always does.
In the studio, after the final look is shot and the lights begin their slow dimming, Arin pulls off a structured Balenciaga blazer and drapes it over a monitor.
Nahyun is already on her phone, photographing something — the exact angle at which a gold reflector has caught the edge of a sculptural earring, the quality of the light, the geometry of the accident.
She does not caption it immediately. She holds it, looking at the image in her palm the way a painter holds a colour chip to the light, measuring its potential.
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BEAUTY+ · June 2026 · Issue No. 47
Sharp Edge, Soft Knife — Nahyun & Arin of Atheart
Digital cover story · Pictorial edition · First published June 1, 2026
Editorial credits
Cover story — words: Ji-Yeon Park
Senior Contributing Editor – Beauty+ Magazine
Editor-in-Chief · Soo-Yeon Lim · Beauty+ Magazine · Seoul Editorial Office
Creative director · Hyunjae Oh · Beauty+ Magazine · Visual & Brand Direction
Art direction · Dahye Seo · Pictorial Layout & Design · Beauty+ Magazine
Copy editor · Min-Jeong Yoo · Editorial Standards · Beauty+ Magazine
Digital producer · Chaeyoung Bae · Digital Editions · Beauty+ Magazine
Photography & image credits
Photography · Studio Vu, Seoul · Lead photographer: Vu Minh Tae
Second photographer · Jiwon Kang · Beauty+, Seoul
Photo editor · Eunji Baek · Beauty+ Magazine
Retouching · Studio Vu Post Production, Seoul
Colour grading · Studio Vu & Beauty+ Digital Lab
Image copyright · © 2026 Beauty+ Magazine. All photography rights reserved. No reproduction without written consent from Beauty+ Magazine and Studio Vu.
Usage licence
Editorial use only. Commercial use, syndication, or third-party reproduction strictly prohibited without written authorisation from Beauty+ Magazine.
BTS photography · Seoyun Jang for Beauty+ & TITAN CONTENT, Seoul
Styling credits
Stylist · Mina Kwon · Beauty+ Fashion Department
Assistant stylist · Raeun Cho & Hyeyeon Park
Hair — Nahyun · Junhee Im · Studio Jin, Seoul
Hair — Arin · Soeun Kim · Studio Jin, Seoul
Make-up — Nahyun · Yoonha Choi · NARS Cosmetics Korea
Make-up — Arin · Jiyoung Han · NARS Cosmetics Korea
Nail art · Dayeon Yoo · Studio Blanc, Seoul
Set design · Woorim Lee · Studio Vu, Seoul
Fashion house credits
Maison Margiela Luxury · Structured tailoring, SS26 collection. Courtesy Maison Margiela, Paris. PR contact: Maison Margiela Korea.
Comme des Garçons Archive · Deconstructed silhouette, archive loan. Courtesy Comme des Garçons, Tokyo / Dover Street Market Seoul.
Sacai Luxury · Hybrid tailoring, AW26 collection. Courtesy Sacai, Tokyo. PR: Sacai Korea PR Office.
Yohji Yamamoto Archive · Draped archive piece. Courtesy Y’s / Yohji Yamamoto Inc., Tokyo. Archive loan facilitated by DSM Seoul.
Balenciaga Luxury · Structured blazer, SS26. Courtesy Balenciaga, Paris. PR: Balenciaga Korea.
Prada Luxury · Campaign season pieces. Courtesy Prada S.p.A., Milan. PR: Prada Korea PR Office, Seoul.
Bottega Veneta Luxury · Accessories and footwear. Courtesy Bottega Veneta, Milan / Kering Korea.
Dior Luxury · Selected looks, ready-to-wear. Courtesy Christian Dior Couture S.A., Paris. PR: Dior Korea.
Islet, Seoul Emerging · Custom commission — layered tulle skirt & oversized smoking jacket. Designer: Kim Islet. Contact: studio@isletseoul.kr
Artist representation
TITAN CONTENT
Exclusive management & representation
Artists · Nahyun & Arin — Atheart
Role · Exclusive talent management, brand partnership oversight, editorial approval
HQ · Seoul, Republic of Korea

