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Room Portraits | Menno Aden
Through challenging camera angles Menno Aden abstracts most familiar actual living environments and public interiors into flattened two-dimensional scale models. A camera that the artist installed on the ceiling of various rooms takes pictures downwards of the interiors. The resulting images lay out space in symmetrical compositions that look like assemblages stripped off any kind of objectivity. The views into private homes and secret retreats bring up associations of the ubiquitous observation camera. The notion of surveillance is systematically played out by the artist to hint at society’s voyeuristic urge that popular culture has made mainstream.
-Miriam Nöske
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suffering from cheek kisses deficiency (self diagnosed)
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maybe you nerds should try a real “goblet of fire” and light up a bowl
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my urge to massively and publically self destruct so someone finally proves they care about my wellbeing is at war with my common sense and terror of being seen as a burden and abandoned
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here is some of David Lynch’s art that i quite like
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there’s the fake merchandising holiday today that makes people depressed and theres also the other really good holiday


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Happy Valentine’s Day, lovers. Take care of each other and yourselves.
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Bong Joon-ho photographed by Kelia Anne Maccluksey for Vanity Fair, January 2020.
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