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Joan Linder Examines Society’s Digital Obsession in ‘Fulfillment’ Exhibition

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‘Fulfillment,’ Linder’s most recent show at Mitchell-Innes & Nash, is a meditation on the increasingly pervasive addiction to computers and screens. An important element of Linder’s art is depth, which focuses on the part that technology and the digital environment play in our global existence and connections.

The ‘Fulfillment’ showcased includes a series of drawings and a set of mixed media works in which the artist deals with the themes of consumer culture and digital networks. Linder’s work depicts observational precision and is able to convey subtle aspects of contemporary living. All the artworks in the exhibition contain aspects of her observations and criticism of modern society.

‘immediate satisfaction, which digital technology provides’ is one of the main topics of ‘Fulfillment’. Linder’s work lays then the dark side of the convenience at stake,, examining the toll on the part of mental health, privacy, and relationships. The exhibition makes the spectator question his/her own practices and raises many fundamental questions about being in a hyperconnected world.

Linder works very tediously, as evidenced by most of her pieces, with a good amount of thinking and self-look involved in her artwork. She works in the typical manner of drawing that generates very compatible, well-detailed material and has a proper textual feel. The notion goes against the high-speed world seen in social media and other forms of digital creations; in a way, it prompts the population to appreciate art in a different dimension.

The ‘Fulfillment’ exhibition was complemented by interactive installations that directly address the actions of a spectator in the context of digital technology. With these installations intended for interaction, Linder wants to provoke a discussion on how technology affects people’s relationships and brings and keeps them together and apart.

Linder’s work has been praised for its art criticism and proper references to society’s most topical concerns. Like any other show, it made a powerful statement concerning the modern world dominated by technology.

Linder’s excellent drawings and installation projects enable the audience to consider the consequences of technological civilization. The exhibition is exciting and rather provocative in relation to issues such as the digital one.

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