This Looks Better IRL - Exploring Cosplay Cons This Looks Better IRL - Exploring Cosplay Cons This Looks Better IRL - Exploring Cosplay Cons This Looks Better IRL - Exploring Cosplay Cons This Looks Better IRL - Exploring Cosplay Cons This Looks Better IRL - Exploring Cosplay Cons This Looks Better IRL - Exploring Cosplay Cons

Xiaoxiao Xu

This Looks Better IRL - Exploring Cosplay Cons

Fw: Books, Amsterdam — 2024
SFr. 30.00
Pages: 196
Edition: Fisrt edition
Dimensions: 16 x 24 cm
Language: English
ISBN: 9789493363052

This looks better irl – Exploring Cosplay Cons follows young people in this contemporary subculture, largely influenced by various Asian media and pop culture, full of community spirit, individuality and personal challenges, as they prepare for and attend cosplay conventions in Western Europe.

The work of Xiaoxiao Xu (CN/NL) focuses on people who relate to traditions and social conventions, but are still driven by individuality and personal desires. For years, her camera has focused on China, but she is now investigating the influence of Asian culture on Western society. In this case, cosplay, a form of performance art in which participants use costumes and accessories to portray a particular character. These are drawn from the world of comics, pop culture, anime, manga, video games, and films.

Over the past few years, Xu has attended various cosplay conventions and met many cosplayers. Their self-made costumes range from endearingly amateurish to lifelike, giving a personal interpretation to the characters they portray.

The cosplay community is very diverse. There is a great deal of mutual acceptance and therefore a large proportion of neurodivergent people. Is there perhaps an overlap with the social and emotional problems that young people are struggling with today? Are there deeper emotions hidden beneath these costumes? To investigate, Xu collected hundreds of screenshots from the cosplayers’ social media accounts. These screenshots form a recurring element in the publication, revealing much of their underlying feelings.

This looks better irl shows a timely subculture in which the interplay between the online and offline worlds, the astonishing costumes, and the youthful vulnerabilities are so delicately portrayed by Xu.

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