GQ Korea’s August 2026 digital cover doesn’t dress up two rookies. It hands the mic to two young creatives who’ve been building the language of “color outside the lines” since before the world knew their names.
By Kpoppie Magazine Editorial · Cover: CORTIS’s James & Martin, GQ Korea x YSL, August 2026 Digital Issue · July 2026
Some collaborations feel inevitable in hindsight — like the fashion house and the artist had been circling each other for years before anyone put them in the same room. GQ Korea’s August 2026 digital cover, pairing CORTIS’s James and Martin with Saint Laurent, is exactly that kind of convergence. Not a stunt. Not a placement. A meeting of two things that were always speaking the same dialect: uncompromising structure, and the confidence to wear it like it was made for you.
Less than a year ago, James and Martin were unknown quantities — two of five names revealed on July 14, 2025, ahead of a debut nobody outside BIGHIT’s walls had fully clocked yet. Now they’re fronting a Saint Laurent pictorial for one of Asia’s most influential fashion titles. That’s not a meteoric rise. That’s a group operating exactly on the timeline they built for themselves.

From “Color Outside the Lines” to the Cover of GQ
CORTIS’s origin story is unusual by K-pop standards, and it matters here because it explains everything about how James and Martin carry themselves in front of a camera. Formed by BIGHIT Music — the label behind BTS and Tomorrow X Together — the group spent two years developing before their August 18, 2025 debut, attending a Los Angeles song camp where all five members helped write and produce their own material.
Their name isn’t a marketing invention. It’s six letters pulled deliberately from their own philosophy: Color Outside the Lines.
That philosophy paid off immediately.
James, the group’s oldest member, arrived with a résumé most rookies would kill for: a black belt in taekwondo, ten years of semi-pro ice hockey, and choreography credits on viral HYBE hits before he ever stood in his own spotlight.
Martin — the group’s teenage leader, Korean-Canadian, a former Rainbow Children’s Choir member who once carried Iceland’s flag at the 2018 Winter Olympics — had already helped produce tracks for Illit and Tomorrow X Together before CORTIS existed.
These aren’t idols who were assembled. They’re collaborators who happened to debut together.
Their debut EP of the same name entered the Billboard 200 at No. 15 — the second-highest debut-album entry any K-pop act has ever posted — while setting first-day sales records and crossing two million in cumulative sales. This wasn’t hype inherited from a label legacy. It was five teenagers proving, fast, that “creator crew” wasn’t just a press-kit phrase.


Saint Laurent as a Second Language
Which is exactly why the YSL pairing lands the way it does. Saint Laurent’s visual grammar — sharp tailoring, unapologetic silhouette, French confidence with global reach — doesn’t ask its wearer to perform authority. It asks them to already have it. James and Martin, both of whom have spent years earning creative credit behind the scenes before ever being handed a spotlight of their own, wear that requirement easily.

It’s worth noting this isn’t Martin’s first run with the house — a W Korea x YSL pictorial back in June 2026 already proved the pairing works as a solo statement. What makes the GQ Korea cover different is the duality: two members, two energies, one shared fluency in the language Saint Laurent speaks.
James brings the discipline of an athlete who’s spent a decade in competitive stillness before the strike. Martin brings the loose, syncopated confidence of a kid who bought a synthesizer for fun and never really needed permission to make something with it.


The Collective Behind the Cover
It would be easy to read a two-member cover as a spotlight moment that leaves the rest of CORTIS in the wings. It isn’t. James and Martin have spent their entire pre-debut and post-debut careers threading their individual skill sets back into the group’s collective identity — James’s choreography instincts, Martin’s production ear — and COER, the group’s official fandom, has always understood the math: every solo flex is still CORTIS flexing.
That’s the real story underneath the styling: CORTIS built a fanbase not by asking to be believed in, but by handing over receipts — chart positions, sales records, self-written and self-choreographed material — until belief became the obvious conclusion. GQ Korea and Saint Laurent aren’t discovering something. They’re catching up to something COER already knew.
What the Cover Actually Represents
K-pop’s relationship with high fashion has always been transactional at its worst and transformative at its best. The best pairings don’t dress an idol in a brand’s aesthetic — they find the place where an artist’s actual identity and a house’s actual philosophy were already overlapping.
That’s what’s happening here. “Color outside the lines” and Saint Laurent’s structured non-conformity aren’t opposites being forced together. They’re two versions of the same idea, in two different languages.
For James, it’s a validation of the discipline that took him from taekwondo mats and hockey rinks to backup choreography credits to his own magazine cover.


For Martin, it’s proof that a kid who once produced tracks for other people’s spotlights has fully stepped into his own.
CORTIS as a whole — a group not yet a year into its debut, already carrying Billboard records and a Saint Laurent cover story — it’s confirmation that the “next generation creator crew” tag was never a marketing line. It was a prediction.
Because that’s what this GQ Korea moment really says, underneath the tailoring and the lighting and the two very different, very magnetic faces of a five-member group still just getting started: this era of K-pop doesn’t wait to be handed authority.
It builds it, wears it, and photographs beautifully doing so.
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Credits & Rights
Kpoppie Magazine — Editorial, Concept Direction & Digital Production
Published by Velocity Entertainment Inc. Limited (Japan / New Zealand)
© 2026 Kpoppie Magazine / Velocity Entertainment Inc. Limited. All rights reserved.
This editorial content is protected under the Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works. No portion of this article, its accompanying social copy, or original commentary may be reproduced, redistributed, or repurposed without prior written permission from Kpoppie Magazine and Velocity Entertainment Inc. Limited.
Pictorial imagery, styling, and cover details referenced are the property of GQ Korea, Saint Laurent (YSL), and BIGHIT Music; used here for editorial commentary and criticism purposes only.
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