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Akiko Busch

    Akiko Busch verfasst Essays, die die komplexe Beziehung zwischen Design, Kultur und unseren gelebten Erfahrungen erforschen. Sie besitzt einen scharfen Blick für das Alltägliche und dringt in das Wesen gewöhnlicher Objekte ein, um zu enthüllen, wie Design unsere Umgebungen und Wahrnehmungen prägt. Ihre Schriften laden die Leser ein, über die Ästhetik und Funktionalität nachzudenken, die unsere persönlichen und kollektiven Räume durchdringen. Durch ihre aufschlussreiche Prosa fördert Busch ein tieferes Verständnis der Welt, in der wir leben, und der Artefakte in ihr.

    How To Disappear
    Everything Else is Bric-a-brac
    Floorworks
    • Shows how to use wood, paint, stain, stenciling, trompe l'oeil, faux finishes, tiles, rugs, and floor cloths to decorate floors

      Floorworks
    • A collection of 60 short prose pieces by best-selling author and design critic Akiko Busch that reflect, in her classic style of observation, on the human condition and offer insights on family, domestic space, and a changing environment. Beautifully illustrated with 20 pieces of watercolor art, this collection makes an inspirational gift. In Everything Else Is Bric-a-Brac, Akiko Busch explores place, memory, and the ambiguities of domestic life. At once thought-provoking, humorous, and meditative, these essays illuminate the emotional resonance of inanimate things; ideas of placement and displacement; the simultaneous frailty and tenacity of human recollection; the beauty of usefulness and uselessness alike; and how we do—and don't—find our place in things.

      Everything Else is Bric-a-brac
    • How To Disappear

      • 224 Seiten
      • 8 Lesestunden
      3,3(981)Abgeben

      Vivid, surprising, and timely, Akiko Busch's exploration of invisibility in nature, art, and science seeks a more joyful way of living in today's surveilled, publicity-obsessed world. In our image-saturated lives, the allure of disappearing feels both enchanting and fanciful. We face relentless pressure to reveal, share, and self-promote, driven by technology companies eager to profit from our behaviors. Busch, a lifelong observer of nature, examines her unease with this constant scrutiny and the widespread longing for a less examined existence. Through rich, painterly detail, she reflects on her life, family, and exotic places—from the Cayman Islands to Iceland—celebrating the pleasures of being unseen. She dramatizes various ways of disappearing, from virtual reality that tricks the wearer into feeling invisible to Virginia Woolf's Mrs. Dalloway, who experiences a flicker of personhood in her later years. With sensitivity and incisiveness, Busch engages with both contemporary and timeless subjects. This unique work is a shimmering collage of poetry, cinema, memoir, and myth, challenging the modern assumption that fame and visibility equate to success and happiness.

      How To Disappear