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Teenagers in Their Bedrooms
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Teenagers in Their Bedrooms

Teenagers in Their Bedrooms

The new edition of Salinger's ever-relevant series of 1980s and '90s teenagers in their bedrooms, with 26 additional photographs.

Bedrooms contain the past, the present and the future; they are sites of continual transformation. Popular culture and fashion continually change and recycle. While specific objects of decor change over time, teenagers' bedrooms are still private sanctuaries: spaces for safely experimenting during a time in life when one is forming and expressing ever-evolving identities.

Upon its release in 1995, Adrienne Salinger's book In My Room was an immediate success, selling nearly 24,000 copies in its first few years. The continued popularity of this work made in the '80s and '90s is curious. However, over the nearly 30 years since, and especially in the most recent decade of social media, the work's appeal has grown tremendously. In some cases, the work evokes nostalgia, but not primarily so. Adrienne Salinger hears from current teenagers often; many send her pictures of their bedrooms today. Social media encourages users to endlessly "rebrand" their identities, creating idealised fantasies, striving for perfection. These photographs are not about perfection. They give voice to the contradictions of our identities.

$51.64
Teenagers in Their Bedrooms
$51.64

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Teenagers in Their Bedrooms - Image 2
Teenagers in Their Bedrooms - Image 3
Teenagers in Their Bedrooms - Image 4
Teenagers in Their Bedrooms - Image 5
Teenagers in Their Bedrooms - Image 6
Teenagers in Their Bedrooms - Image 7
Teenagers in Their Bedrooms - Image 8

Teenagers in Their Bedrooms

The new edition of Salinger's ever-relevant series of 1980s and '90s teenagers in their bedrooms, with 26 additional photographs.

Bedrooms contain the past, the present and the future; they are sites of continual transformation. Popular culture and fashion continually change and recycle. While specific objects of decor change over time, teenagers' bedrooms are still private sanctuaries: spaces for safely experimenting during a time in life when one is forming and expressing ever-evolving identities.

Upon its release in 1995, Adrienne Salinger's book In My Room was an immediate success, selling nearly 24,000 copies in its first few years. The continued popularity of this work made in the '80s and '90s is curious. However, over the nearly 30 years since, and especially in the most recent decade of social media, the work's appeal has grown tremendously. In some cases, the work evokes nostalgia, but not primarily so. Adrienne Salinger hears from current teenagers often; many send her pictures of their bedrooms today. Social media encourages users to endlessly "rebrand" their identities, creating idealised fantasies, striving for perfection. These photographs are not about perfection. They give voice to the contradictions of our identities.

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The new edition of Salinger's ever-relevant series of 1980s and '90s teenagers in their bedrooms, with 26 additional photographs.

Bedrooms contain the past, the present and the future; they are sites of continual transformation. Popular culture and fashion continually change and recycle. While specific objects of decor change over time, teenagers' bedrooms are still private sanctuaries: spaces for safely experimenting during a time in life when one is forming and expressing ever-evolving identities.

Upon its release in 1995, Adrienne Salinger's book In My Room was an immediate success, selling nearly 24,000 copies in its first few years. The continued popularity of this work made in the '80s and '90s is curious. However, over the nearly 30 years since, and especially in the most recent decade of social media, the work's appeal has grown tremendously. In some cases, the work evokes nostalgia, but not primarily so. Adrienne Salinger hears from current teenagers often; many send her pictures of their bedrooms today. Social media encourages users to endlessly "rebrand" their identities, creating idealised fantasies, striving for perfection. These photographs are not about perfection. They give voice to the contradictions of our identities.

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