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STAGED PHOTOGRAPHY II

In an era where reality is endlessly edited, filtered, and performed, staged photography pushes even further — constructing worlds that feel more vivid, more precise, and at times more believable than life itself.  These images don’t just document; they manufacture experience. Rooted in the idea of hyperreality - a term coined by Jean Baudrillard, artists create fictions so finely detailed they rival and often replace the real. 

In this issue, we explore how these constructed realities seduce and unsettle us.
 



Andreas Gursky, Les Mées (2016)
Image Courtesy: Sprüth Magers
Can staged realities tell us more about ourselves than real life ever could?

When images feel truer than truth itself, can we still trust what we see? Or have we already lost the ability - or the will - to tell the difference?

How does hyperreality alter the way we remember, dream, or even imagine?



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