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Sophie Sebastiani:

Remember a Place Not Here
 
Sophie Sebastiani
Economics and Media Arts & Sciences major
 
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photographs in the Jewett Sculpture Court and Jewett Hallway Galleries
 
variously sized photographs on a gray fabric wall
 
angled view of variously sized photographs on a white wall
 
Full Moon Over the Charles River; Boston, MA
archival inkjet print
 
photo of city buildings seen across a river with a traffic one fallen over in front; many birds in the sky
 
"Somehow, you knew that everything was a bit odd, and a bit unreal, and often fake, but because there was no other picture of the world, and you were so within this system you accepted it as normal and just went on." - Adam Curtis
 
I have recently become interested in the concept of hyperreality; how technology is narrowing the gap between reality and simulation in a way that results in a very surreal and generally unstable perception of the world around us. At the same time, the structural inequalities in our society that maintain the social hierarchy of global capitalism have fractured the realities of many Americans by further widening the gap between the very wealthy and the poor, shrinking the middle class and decimating the American dream.
 
A Normal Place with Happy People; Boston, MA

archival inkjet print

 
building under construction in a city with birds flying nearby
 
In large cities like Boston, the income disparities driving this hierarchy are glaringly obvious, no more so than in Back Bay in the area surrounding Newbury Street, a road lined with commercial buildings ranging from fast-fashion stores like Urban Outfitters and TJ Maxx on one end to luxury brands such as Cartier and Chanel at the other.
 
Heading Across a Great Divide; Boston, MA

archival inkjet print

 
black and white photo of people crossing a busy city street, some with heads removed from the image
 
Through this collection, I wanted to illustrate a perspective of the chaotic, absurd reality of this ever-developing landscape while combining further aspects of surrealism in photoshop to disorient the viewer. These images depict the containers of social inequity that we are all trapped in and our ignorance in the face of it, adding in visual themes of corporate development and an apocalypse of biblical proportions that is invisible to everyone in the scene while the viewer remains helpless to intervene.
 
Grocery Run; Wellesley, MA

archival inkjet print

 
large building under construction with murmuration of birds overhead
 
The Labor of Voyeurism; Wellesley, MA

archival inkjet print

 
person replacing a long classroom lightbulb, seen from outside a dark building
 
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variously sized photographs on a white wall with the underside of stairs above, tiled floor and modernist chairs below
 
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