The Appearance of That Which Cannot Be Seen

$36
For more than 20 years, German photographer and filmmaker Armin Linke has been photographing the effects of globalization, the wholesale transformation of infrastructure and the networking of the post-industrial society via digital information and communication technologies.
395 pages
Designed by Jan Kiesswetter, Mevis van Deursen
Published by Spector Books
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395 pages
Designed by Jan Kiesswetter, Mevis van Deursen
Published by Spector Books
Be a PAL to save 10%
This item could not be added to your cart.

Do you have to see it to design it? Does it need to see to be seen? Do you believe it if you see it? If you see something, say something?

For more than 20 years, German photographer and filmmaker Armin Linke (born 1966) has been photographing the effects of globalization, the wholesale transformation of infrastructure and the networking of the post-industrial society via digital information and communication technologies.

His photographs show that the modern world is a massive profusion of data, where the material infrastructures―consisting of computer centers, data highways and server rooms―are largely invisible.

For The Appearance of That Which Cannot Be Seen, Linke invited scientists, philosophers and theoreticians to examine his picture archive. Ariella Azoulay, Bruno Latour, Peter Weibel, Mark Wigley, and Jan Zalasiewicz made a selection of images and in the process opened up Linke’s photos to a variety of different readings.