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Javier Arbona-Homar

Javier Arbona-Homar

Richmond, CA, US

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A US Navy Mark II Talon explosive ordnance disposal (EOD) robot inspects a simulated suspicious package during an anti-terrorism and force protection drill at Naval Air Station Whidbey Island, Washington, March 18, 2014.
A US Navy Mark II Talon explosive ordnance disposal (EOD) robot inspects a simulated suspicious package during an anti-terrorism and force protection drill at Naval Air Station Whidbey Island, Washington, March 18, 2014.

Harvard Design Magazine. Suspunk: Thinking with Suspicious Packages – Javier Arbona, Bryan Finoki, Nick Sowers

Report suspicious activity. If you see something, say something. Do not leave bags unattended. These are the instructions for acceptable cohabitation in the secure city. But objects mediate between bodies. People are allowed to put materials into new and unexpected configurations, as long as such arrangements do not inspire fear or dread.

Objects in space must have an author or an owner who speaks for them, lest they leave interpretation up to undue speculation. Unknowability is insecurity. However, the alarmist idea of the “suspicious package” may unlock a different politics of urban life, one premised on sensuous materialism rather than security theater.

"Suspunk: Thinking with Suspicious Packages" (with Bryan Finoki and Nick Sowers) in the Harvard Design Magazine, No. 42, Spring/Summer 2016.

 
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