TAKE TAKE TAKE
2022
• It's warm in here
• glb-archive
• Too heavy for upload
In TAKE TAKE TAKE I worked with the question how possessions, often associated with memories and essential for personal identity, become less and less important in a more digitalized world. As somebody who loves to surround herself with nice physical things, I am asking myself how my stuff anchors me in reality and how I can take all my beloved trinkets and heirlooms with me once I descent into the digital space.
In the timespan of one semester I developed three distinct works dealing with different parts of this question.




TAKE TAKE TAKE
2022
• It's warm in here
• glb-archive
• Too heavy for upload
In TAKE TAKE TAKE I worked with the question how possessions, often associated with memories and essential for personal identity, become less and less important in a more digitalized world. As somebody who loves to surround herself with nice physical things, I am asking myself how my stuff anchors me in reality and how I can take all my beloved trinkets and heirlooms with me once I descent into the digital space.
In the timespan of one semester I developed three distinct works dealing with different parts of this question.
The give in to brainrot videos distill books into no more than 37 seconds of snackable, bite-sized brainrot content.
As attention spans dwindle among younger generations, complex ideas and nuanced concepts are increasingly simplified. This shift towards consuming fragmented, repetitive information fails to cultivate genuine understanding. Yet, in a world where time is money and knowledge is treated as a commodity, the rot feels inevitable.
The give in to brainrot videos distill books into no more than 37 seconds of snackable, bite-sized brainrot content.
As attention spans dwindle among younger generations, complex ideas and nuanced concepts are increasingly simplified. This shift towards consuming fragmented, repetitive information fails to cultivate genuine understanding. Yet, in a world where time is money and knowledge is treated as a commodity, the rot feels inevitable.