MARCH 2020
Charlie Koolhaas
City Lust
Scheidegger & Spiess, 2020
Including 2 printed emails from the author, for our subscribers
DEAR FRIEND OF 8 BOOKS A YEAR,
I dared to set my Instagram account on “pause”. I did it 7 months ago, I just had enough. What had started as a nice tool for me to inspire myself had finally become too much of an omnipresent distraction. However, what disturbed me even more was how the character of most of the posts has changed over the last years: from picture sharing to self-positioning. The vast majority of all posted photos nowadays come with a clearly noticeable but quite bitter ingredient: the tactical anticipation of their expected mass effects. in simpler words: Whoever shares a photo today acts like they’re on stage and part of a beauty or singing contest. Not one where you have the chance to truly express yourself, but the kind where you’re judged by a calculating jury. For me nothing less than an alienation from life. I’m still trying to experience the opposite. When you page through this book you hopefully won’t be reminded of Instagram or other social media channels. With her words and photos, Charlie Koolhaas almost gave me the feeling that I was being led by the hand of a friend who showed me all these interesting places in London, Guangzhou, Lagos, Dubai and Houston while telling me more about them. It made me jealous, happy, curious and sad. I wondered about the lives of the people portrayed. I often imagined the ambient sounds or even the smell of some of the streets and corners pictured. If Instagram were like that, I wouldn’t have needed a break.
All my best,
Christian Kaspar Schwarm
Charlie Koolhaas
City Lust
Scheidegger & Spiess, 2020
Including 2 printed emails from the author, for our subscribers
Read InscriptionDEAR FRIEND OF 8 BOOKS A YEAR,
I dared to set my Instagram account on “pause”. I did it 7 months ago, I just had enough. What had started as a nice tool for me to inspire myself had finally become too much of an omnipresent distraction. However, what disturbed me even more was how the character of most of the posts has changed over the last years: from picture sharing to self-positioning. The vast majority of all posted photos nowadays come with a clearly noticeable but quite bitter ingredient: the tactical anticipation of their expected mass effects. in simpler words: Whoever shares a photo today acts like they’re on stage and part of a beauty or singing contest. Not one where you have the chance to truly express yourself, but the kind where you’re judged by a calculating jury. For me nothing less than an alienation from life. I’m still trying to experience the opposite. When you page through this book you hopefully won’t be reminded of Instagram or other social media channels. With her words and photos, Charlie Koolhaas almost gave me the feeling that I was being led by the hand of a friend who showed me all these interesting places in London, Guangzhou, Lagos, Dubai and Houston while telling me more about them. It made me jealous, happy, curious and sad. I wondered about the lives of the people portrayed. I often imagined the ambient sounds or even the smell of some of the streets and corners pictured. If Instagram were like that, I wouldn’t have needed a break.
All my best,
Christian Kaspar Schwarm