Journal of Dreams 6: Shopping
featuring Mónica Belevan, Roland Caracostea, Savinien Caracostea, Annette Condello, Fulvio Ferrari, Kirby Fowle, Nicholas Gervasi, Kemper Hyers, Flavia Masson, Phillip Nelson, Rodica Prato, Yehuda Safran, Katie Vitale.
56 pages • color • includes 3D glasses • printed in NY • October 2018
Walking into a department store today almost feels nostalgic, as if visiting confused and disheveled remnants of spaces whose golden age is long past, vessels for dreams of a bygone era. Taking its place, online shopping is further removing the dream from objects and experiences, abstracting them as interfaces and cutouts devoid of context, shadow or materiality. Furthermore, the permeance of advertising and race for global marketshare, profitability per square foot, and followers on social media has made the shopping experience loud, homogeneous and meaningless.
featuring Mónica Belevan, Roland Caracostea, Savinien Caracostea, Annette Condello, Fulvio Ferrari, Kirby Fowle, Nicholas Gervasi, Kemper Hyers, Flavia Masson, Phillip Nelson, Rodica Prato, Yehuda Safran, Katie Vitale.
56 pages • color • includes 3D glasses • printed in NY • October 2018
Walking into a department store today almost feels nostalgic, as if visiting confused and disheveled remnants of spaces whose golden age is long past, vessels for dreams of a bygone era. Taking its place, online shopping is further removing the dream from objects and experiences, abstracting them as interfaces and cutouts devoid of context, shadow or materiality. Furthermore, the permeance of advertising and race for global marketshare, profitability per square foot, and followers on social media has made the shopping experience loud, homogeneous and meaningless.
featuring Mónica Belevan, Roland Caracostea, Savinien Caracostea, Annette Condello, Fulvio Ferrari, Kirby Fowle, Nicholas Gervasi, Kemper Hyers, Flavia Masson, Phillip Nelson, Rodica Prato, Yehuda Safran, Katie Vitale.
56 pages • color • includes 3D glasses • printed in NY • October 2018
Walking into a department store today almost feels nostalgic, as if visiting confused and disheveled remnants of spaces whose golden age is long past, vessels for dreams of a bygone era. Taking its place, online shopping is further removing the dream from objects and experiences, abstracting them as interfaces and cutouts devoid of context, shadow or materiality. Furthermore, the permeance of advertising and race for global marketshare, profitability per square foot, and followers on social media has made the shopping experience loud, homogeneous and meaningless.