![]() We love this thought a lot, and put together our most senior Art Directors to bring out the best in this idea. The agency came up with a wonderful print idea that best demonstrate the torture test for Samsonite suitcases - where passengers receiving ‘heavenly’ treatments during the flight, we see their suitcases undergoing ‘hellish’ torture throughout the journey. Two years later, the right opportunity came along. I knew I had to work with Surachai, and Illusion someday. Since its launch in July 2016, the blog has been featured in a wide range of publications, including the Huffington Post, Slate, Business Insider, and Paper Magazine.I first met Surachai, owner of the famed Illusion CGI Studio, at the Spikes Asia judging session in 2009. I was very impressed by his professionalism – beyond the skills of art and craft, he was looking at how these elements helped to make the idea better. Kate Wagner is the creator of the viral blog McMansion Hell, which roasts the world’s ugliest houses from top to bottom, all while teaching about architecture and design. ![]() ![]() He is currently an associate professor and the graduate director of Photography at the Rhode Island School of Design. His work has been featured in the New York Times Magazine Time Magazine on National Public Radio programs Orion Magazine Vice Magazine Artforum Yvi Magazine, and Adbusters. The Anderson Gallery published the catalog Closeout: Retail, Relics, and Ephemera (2013). His first major monograph, Is This Place Great or What (2011), was included in The Photobook: A History Volume 3 (2014). In 2009, Ulrich was awarded a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship. Ulrich has had solo exhibitions at the Cleveland Museum of Art and the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, in addition to numerous group exhibitions at institutions such as the Walker Art Center the San Diego Museum of Art the New York Public Library, and the Art Institute of Chicago. His first book, The Longing for Less, on minimalism and the beauty of absences, will be published by Bloomsbury in 2019.īrian Ulrich’s photographs portraying contemporary consumer culture are held by major museums, including the Art Institute of Chicago the Baltimore Museum of Art the George Eastman Museum the Museum of Contemporary Photography, Chicago and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. He wrote the viral essay “Welcome to AirSpace” for The Verge in August 2016. He has contributed to publications including the New York Times Magazine, the New Republic, and n+1. Kyle Chayka is a freelance journalist and critic living in Brooklyn. ![]() Tickets are only available online when you register for the program. Our ICP Museum–public program combination ticket grants $10 entry starting at 4:30 PM to those attending the program. ICP Members have access to preferred seating in our reserved members’ section. This is a free event, but please register in advance. Join us to hear their distinctive perspectives on architecture and the visual culture of consumption. Kate Wagner runs the popular blog McMansion Hell, the ultimate guide to the "bad architecture" of postmodern sprawl. Brian Ulrich photographs the architecture of consumption and its remains: shuttered malls, big box retail, and the excess of "fast fashion" goods in second-hand shops. Critic Kyle Chayka proposes that we're FourSquaring, Yelping, and AirBnBing towards indistinguishable interior design across the urban, globalized world.
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