For most of us, looking at our phones has become about as common as breathing. French photographer Antoine Geiger has created a series of photos, “SUR-FAKE,” that captures our growing connection to our phones and how it leads to a disconnect with the outside world.
“It [places] the screen as an object of ‘mass subculture,’ said Geiger via email to GOOD, “alienating the relation to our own body, and more generally to the physical world.”
“SUR-FAKE” echoes Geiger’s “SUR-FACE” series which focused on identity and his work certainly provides an unsettling look at our screen-obsessed culture.




















A collection of toilet paper rollsCanva
A bidet next to a toiletCanva
A cute pig looks at the cameraCanva
A gif of Bill Murray at the dentist via
A woman scrolls on her phoneCanva
A confident woman gives a speech in front of a large crowdCanva

Creativity and innovation are both likely to become increasingly important for young people entering the workplace, especially as AI continues to grow.