Friday, November 13, 2015
It’s all about toys, argues blogger Nikos Papadopoulos, the man behind a photographic project using toys as instruments towards social satire.
Inspired by an incident in which he employed Playmobil pieces to explain something to his young son, he has developed this method as a way of depicting Greece during the crisis, including scenes of humans enslaved by ATMs, or sunbathers surrounded by refugees.
Thus, "Plasticobilism" was born, a project illustrating the conditions "that force you to break your silence as they produce an inner need for you to express yourself". Plasticobilism has attracted wide interest with its sharp, funny and critical scenes of austerity at home, the refugee crisis, the violence in society as well as in warzones, and the consequences of people’s actions - or non-actions.
Inspired by an incident in which he employed Playmobil pieces to explain something to his young son, he has developed this method as a way of depicting Greece during the crisis, including scenes of humans enslaved by ATMs, or sunbathers surrounded by refugees.
Thus, "Plasticobilism" was born, a project illustrating the conditions "that force you to break your silence as they produce an inner need for you to express yourself". Plasticobilism has attracted wide interest with its sharp, funny and critical scenes of austerity at home, the refugee crisis, the violence in society as well as in warzones, and the consequences of people’s actions - or non-actions.
