This major book surveys Arps recent work but through a peculiar lens.
This is an artist known for making spaces - dystopic, uncomfortable,
decrepit, paranoid, aspirational - that are in their own reality. Here,
they are reconstructed as parts of one overarching space, the
affirmation dungeon, in which self-help is crow-barred off its pedestal,
along with other forms of normative shaming. This book has been put
together with the logic of dungeon mapper or game builder, a temporarily
liberated reality forming around the viewer as avatar. What is really
pictured is unclear, but this space can be looked at as indexing or
growing out of pressure-intensive neoliberal New Zealand - a society
hollowed out into which one is compelled to amass rubbish as a way of
claiming space or enacting sovereignty. The way in which Arps has
consistently worked with and altered found materials is echoed in the
way in which text material has been assembled for the book, involving
pieces taken from the Internet and earlier publications, and slippages
and glitches in language; language, time, and architectural space being
sites for resistance to measurement, authority, conservatism,
simplification, homogenisation, and gentrification.
Ex library, hardcover book in very good condition.