Walter Benjamin said: "It does not matter if you don't know how to orient yourself in a city. On the contrary, to lose yourself in a city as one loses oneself in a forest requires practice."
My methodology for encountering the urban is precisely based on walking without a set route, on the dérive and on intuitive wanderings. And in this drift, I "listen" to the city from a perspective that is critical of the established order, responding to official rhetoric and discourses.
"Dead angles" is the product of these wanderings. They are little-traveled places, negative spaces, the city that is seen but not looked at. It is the confirmation of error. The urban dystopia where nature, its order and harmony are non-existent. Social critique, the confirmation of the non-place, and existential angst, all in one.
It is an anti-tourist map of the contemporary city. Its B-side.