In the aftermath of October 7th, the future between the river and the sea has felt increasingly illegible—narrowed by grief, fear, and polarized certainties. Future Screenshots is a response to that closing horizon. It’s an invitation to imagine again.
The project collects speculative glimpses into possible futures—captured as if from social media, protest signs, maps, chats, or interfaces. Not predictions, but provocations. Not a timeline, but a terrain of anticipation.
These screenshots, submitted by workshop participants, exhibition visitors, and co-creators, are arranged not chronologically but relationally—by emotional resonance, thematic alignment, spatial metaphor. Together, they form the Futures Map, a living interface for political imagination.
Because the future doesn’t arrive as a headline. It seeps in through the margins, in how we see, name, and locate what might still be possible.
📎 Read the essay: Future Screenshots
