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if only,

@caldermobile / caldermobile.tumblr.com

i'm never home
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archatlas

Miniature Rooms Inside Television Sets

Chinese artist Zhang Xiangxi creates these incredible miniature replicas of rooms inside the shells of discarded vintage TV sets. His attention to detail, when recreating a train car or a luxury apartment, might fool you into thinking you are waiting for a TV show to start, but in reality you are looking at his intricate set designs that aim to capture reality inside a TV.

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Throbbing Gristle - Heathen Earth (1980)

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ZAIRE STUDIO by Ayanna Zaire

This collection, “Your Satisfaction is Our Future”, was crafted while researching how labor has a direct correlation to economic liberation, thus freedom. Revisiting “The American Dream”. Exploring craft and making with intention as the only path to financial and social autonomy. Evidence of labor reminiscent materials can be found in the implementation of drop cloth canvas as the foundation fabric of the collection, often used to protect floors and valuables at construction sites. The grommets applied by hand and hammer hold the garments together with binder rings. Hammer, reminding us of “manual labor” while binder rings remind us of “office labor”. Reconstructed Hanes ribbed tanks are also introduced as “second skin” in the collection reminding us of that garment our fathers, brothers, friends, or lovers wore while tending to the house or laboring outside on a hot summer day. Conversely the Hanes ribbed tank is also often the undershirt worn below the worker’s uniform or the dress shirt. This iconic American undergarment is a commonality between both blue and white collar laborers. Bringing it all together garments are hand crafted — sewn and stitched, labor viewed as “woman’s work”. Pink collar. “Your Satisfaction is Our Future” is indeed a woman’s work, designed with intention and crafted carefully with love and the desire of productive discourse in mind. This collection serves as a timely reminder that fair access to meaningful labor, capital, and independence is often what separates us and, at the same time, it is the pursuit that inextricably makes us similar.
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