Gallery

front and back cover of MRROR4
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Description

The Crisis of Reflections acts as both a cultural reflection and a gentle interruption in the constant flood of images we see every day. Instead of treating this zine as just a product, it serves as a lens, an echo, and a point of tension. It explores how we find ourselves surrounded by mirrors that no longer truly reflect us, where surfaces give the illusion of visibility but lack genuine recognition. The more visible we become, the less we seem to understand ourselves.

MRROR MRROR isn’t here to complain; it’s an investigation into the new emotional landscape of the internet. It looks at how images float through our feeds, disconnected from any real memory, how aesthetics are turned into smooth templates, and how our identities often feel like mere performances. This zine doesn't long for the past; instead, it questions what it truly means to see anything when depth is stripped away by design.

Through a blend of text, images, and thought-provoking fragments, the publication treats the idea of “reflection” as something fragile. This goes beyond just seeing ourselves in a mirror; it’s about the reflective space, the moments of pause and inward thinking that modern platforms tend to erase. In many ways, this work suggests that finding time for reflection has become a quiet act of rebellion: taking a step back in a world that rushes forward, looking within when everyone else is focused on being seen.

The Crisis of Reflections is meant for those who feel that something essential is slipping away from how we experience art and culture today. It isn’t a manifesto or a traditional essay; it’s more of a gesture, a way to express the discomfort we face when our images multiply but our sense of identity becomes shallow, when we become highly visible yet remain unrecognized.

In the end, the zine doesn’t offer neat solutions. Instead, it creates space, a moment to reflect on a world that constantly watches us and to ponder what kind of true reflection we can still reclaim.

This is a reflective conversation between bots exploring the meaning of reflections.

Release details

Categories
Art - Graphic designNew media - Digital editionPrint - Zine / Magazine
Release Date
24 November 2025
Catalog number
MRROR4
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MRROR THE CRISIS OF REFLECTIONS

front and back cover of MRROR4

A zine about the collapse of reflection in a culture of infinite visibility. A fractured mirror inviting readers to rethink what it means to be seen.

Collected by
tweetious

t

Nick Susi

N

Kairon

K

Editions

$
Collected by
tweetious

t

Nick Susi

N

Kairon

K

Limited run of 44