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See You There

We live in a time that offers seemingly boundless opportunities for travel and connection, yet paradoxically, we are more lonely and divided than ever. Dating apps conjure romance within a chosen radius; GPS offers pathways to dreamy holiday destinations; while generative AI interprets unfamiliar sounds into digestible multilingual summaries. Marks of time and space have bent to market desires; outer space travel has become the next horizon for conspicuous consumption; while we keep investing in the illusory capacity to commercialise all forms of human experience.

In a context of global climate crisis and widening economic disparity, the eco-social cost of global mobility is impossible to ignore. The occupation of placescolonised lands and global movement of bodiesdisplaced peoples through conflicts and environmental disasters, sits in stark contrast to the techno-utopian reveries of oligarchs. For many, the everyday experience of a technologically-mediated community increasingly complicates and confuses perceptionsa sense of belonging to one, or any, place on this earth. At the same time, contemporary technologies may offer vital networks of support and distributed spaces for deep connection that should not be underestimated.

How do we find community and connection, in an ever expanding and complex spatial imaginary? What are the images, ideas and questions that shape our multilayered sense of belonging today?

See you there is a publishing project that facilitates contemporary conversations about space, place, community and mobility. Through a series of linked interventions, it showcases the work of a selected group of international practitioners to provoke reflection about how and where we might find our communities (and at what cost).

For Ursula K. Le Guin, stories serve as ‘carrier bags’ to gather and share knowledge. They are woven through complex fibres of word and image, and form a fundamental technology for human survival. For the editors of See You There, the ‘travel bag’ offers a way to re-imagine knowledge exchange, connection and creation. It reflects an incomplete process that holds images and ideas, which are transported between people and places.

Explore the Travel Bag

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