Impulsetoliberty

The primary impulse to liberty often begins with destruction

“ I felt that in our lives there was too much symmetry – too much order. Especially when I looked at brands and products I saw this immense and tyrannical symmetry which I felt was enforced more for the purpose of enhancing the power of the object and its manufacturers than it was to serve any rational end… I wanted to free the form of these objects, which really meant to free the rules that governed how people were able to make these objects… and hopefully (I guess somewhat optimistically) to allow people to understand their own power over the form of the world that they live in.”

 

 

- Paul-Emile Rioux

 

 
Paul Emile Rioux lives in Montreal, Canada.
He is fascinated by contemporary environments, and through his own chaotic and open-ended process,
he explores the inter-relationship of politics, consumer culture and technology.
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