Gemma Bartlett
@gemlizb
Gemma Bartlett
@gemlizb
“The logic of algorithms tends to repeat what “works,” but art opens up what is possible. Not everything has to be immediate or predictable. Defend slowness when it serves a purpose, silence when it speaks and difference when evocative. Beauty is not just a means of escape; it is, above all, an invocation. When cinema is authentic, it does not
An exploration on the luxury, status and current relevance of being offline.
Consumption can be a trap we use to avoid taking agency for a problem or specific goal. We know some kind of creation is required but it feels hard so instead we get stuck ina loop on consumption. Collecting more then we need to actually take action like we can tick off he first step indefinitely and still get somewhere.
Consumption isn’t “bad” it’s a necessary step in the act of producing anything. But consumption without outlet? Consumption without capacity to process and create? Eventually it clogs everything up. The mind, space, time, and the physical body.
This means that our current capitalist system is set up less to meet and fulfill our current needs than it is to generate new ones, which, of course, can only be met through additional consumption—consumption of new lifestyles, experiences, products, upgrades, and apps with features we suddenly can’t live without.
Hence the irony that consumerism, which we often denounce as “materialism,” is in fact quite happy to reduce things to nothingness. What makes such serial acquisition consumptive is precisely this treatment of things as disposable. While on the one hand this practice invests things with redemptive promise, on the other hand they can never measure
... See moreThe act of consumption itself has become a drug.