Paweł Kuczyński's illustrations provide a satirical look at our relationship with technology, particularly the ways we are controlled by screens and social media. His artwork reflects how people have become more connected online yet increasingly disconnected in real life.
By portraying figures tangled in digital icons or glued to their phones, he highlights the dangers of losing ourselves to constant internet engagement, especially more so in recent years with the rise of AI technology. Pavel hopes his work serves as a reminder to balance our online activities with genuine, face-to-face interactions, pushing us to think about the real value of human connection beyond the screens.
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Spot on. Social media is making a$ses of us (my apologies to donkeys).
Social media is an addiction. I do not and never will have a Facebook account, and I rarely use my Twitter account these days.
When you're staring at your phone's screen, you're unaware of everything else. Guys on electric scooters rely on this, for easy pickings
Instant baby sitters to make parents’ lives easier.
There is literally no form of protest that cannot be turned into, or labelled as, violence. But still, there are some things we cannot accept and must, therefore, protest ...
I just don't think phones are the apocalypse as presented. I do think social media is generally a cesspit, but that's been true of all new media/communication throughout history.
They are a tool. Almost any tool has the capacity for misuse, then they become a weapon.
Load More Replies...The art is good, buy the message is ham-handed. Looks like a high school art project that attempts to be edgy.
I just don't think phones are the apocalypse as presented. I do think social media is generally a cesspit, but that's been true of all new media/communication throughout history.
They are a tool. Almost any tool has the capacity for misuse, then they become a weapon.
Load More Replies...The art is good, buy the message is ham-handed. Looks like a high school art project that attempts to be edgy.