Article 1NJBG Minimalism "not really minimal"

Minimalism "not really minimal"

by
Rob Beschizza
from on (#1NJBG)

no.jpg

Kyle Chayka hates minimalism, a consumer product like any other, a class signifier, a "slightly intriguing perversion, like drinking at breakfast" for the insincere global elite.

...an outgrowth of a peculiarly American (that is to say, paradoxical and self-defeating) brand of Puritanical asceticism, this new minimalist lifestyle always seems to end in enabling new modes of consumption, a veritable excess of less. It's not really minimal at all. ...

...it comes with an inherent pressure to conform to its precepts. Whiteness, in a literal sense, is good. Mess, heterogeneity, is bad - the opposite impulse of artistic minimalism. It is anxiety-inducing in a manner indistinguishable from other forms of consumerism, not revolutionary at all. Do I own the right things? Have I jettisoned enough of the wrong ones? In a recent interview with Apartamento magazine set against interior shots of his all-white home in Rockaway, Queens, the tastemaker and director of MoMA PS1 Klaus Biesenbach explained, "I don't aim to own things."... it takes a lot to be minimalist: social capital, a safety net and access to the internet.

It seems a bit confused on the relationships between different things and people calling themselves "minimalist," and the snark verges on how dare you - but yeah, fuck Soylent.

These are great tweets, also:

https://twitter.com/chaykak/status/757957733723344896

https://twitter.com/chaykak/status/757948137713565700

External Content
Source RSS or Atom Feed
Feed Location http://boingboing.net/rss
Feed Title
Feed Link http://boingboing.net/
Reply 0 comments