Riad Mirage Club is the fifth volume of the long-term and ongoing documentary project Future Rust, Future Dust (2016 - ), which aims to analyze the urban and architectural impact of the last world financial crisis and the burst of the real estate bubble.
Through a "concrete tsunami" exploration of ghost cities, aborted tourism projects, unused infrastructures, or roads leading to nowhere, this project plunges us into a post-apocalyptic atmosphere, vestige of this modern age mixing economic failures, corrupt elected officials, megalomaniac investors and dreams of home-ownership.
Witnesses of this big waste of – often public – money, these modern ruins hide human and ecological tragedies: indebted and defrauded people, homes finished but abandoned when so many people can’t find a place to live, and Nature disfigured for nothing, even in areas protected by law.
Throughout a visual approach combining aestheticism and graphism, Riad Mirage Club reports the impact of the 2008 financial crisis which directly affected Morocco. Marrakech, main touristic destination, experienced an outbreak of property programs, characterized by a strong demand and soaring prices, in an unregulated area where everyone could become a promoter. Today, these concrete skeletons continue to dot the semi-desert landscape around Marrakech.
amateur category
Riad Mirage Club (Series)
DESCRIPTION
AUTHOR
Geographer and now working in humanitarian NGO, my passion for urban photography was born 7 years ago. Firstly attracted by contemporary architecture, I explored metropolises of the world to find colorful and graphics architectural subjects, seeking to sublimate volumes and perspectives.
Today my photographic work is shifting towards the study of the dynamics and changes of urban and peri-urban landscapes, and of these ‘urban interstices’ places, urban in their spirit of design, but ‘non-urban’ in their effective functionality, but which are nevertheless part of every day life and ordinary landscape.
I try to highlight unsustainable political and socio-economic phenomena, sometimes devoid of all common sense, through a monographic photo study documenting abandoned, stopped or under-utilized modern spaces throughout the world.
Today my photographic work is shifting towards the study of the dynamics and changes of urban and peri-urban landscapes, and of these ‘urban interstices’ places, urban in their spirit of design, but ‘non-urban’ in their effective functionality, but which are nevertheless part of every day life and ordinary landscape.
I try to highlight unsustainable political and socio-economic phenomena, sometimes devoid of all common sense, through a monographic photo study documenting abandoned, stopped or under-utilized modern spaces throughout the world.
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