Etranges Exhibitions 2002 Benjamin Beaulieu -

But the underground loved him. Zine writers like Sophie Delacroix argued that Beaulieu was the only artist addressing the real anxiety of 2002: that the digital world wasn't a utopia, but a haunted house. "His exhibitions are strange because they show us ourselves," Delacroix wrote. "A degraded self. A self that is always being watched by its own eye through a broken lens."

To visit those exhibitions today is impossible. You cannot walk into the abandoned optical shop (it is now a luxury bakery). You cannot log into the Undernet chat room (it is silent). But you can still feel the static. You can still search for the keyword, click on the broken links, and wait for the binary weeping to begin. etranges exhibitions 2002 benjamin beaulieu

And in that waiting, in that strange, buggy space between the real and the digital, Benjamin Beaulieu is still holding his exhibition. And he is still not turning around. If you have any photographs, original files, or personal memories of the "etranges exhibitions 2002 benjamin beaulieu," please contact the Digital Archaeology Unit. Beaulieu’s estate—if one exists—has never responded to requests for comment. But the underground loved him