The Floating House Built From Strangers’ Wishes

Most houses start with a blueprint. Jisoo Yoo’s Dream House started with a question: how do the dreams and desires we carry shape the landscape of the world we inhabit? The answer, it turns out, is a floating structure made of clothing.

Yoo, a Seoul-born artist who lives and works in France, has been quietly building one of the more compelling bodies of work in contemporary art, one that orbits around the domestic, the ephemeral, and the barely-visible structures that hold our lives together. Dream House, her latest installation presented at (F)ESTIVALES at Les Tanneries, Centre d’art contemporain, is exactly the kind of project that makes you stop and genuinely reconsider what a home actually is.

Designer: Jisoo Yoo

Here’s how it works. Participants are invited to contribute a garment, something personal, something worn, and mark it with handwritten texts and drawings. These pieces of clothing then become the literal building blocks of the structure, each one a personal archive, each one a load-bearing element. The result is a house that floats, literally and conceptually, held aloft not by concrete or steel, but by the private wishes of strangers.

That’s a beautiful idea, and I mean that without a trace of irony. We spend so much time thinking about homes in terms of square footage, property value, and interior aesthetics that we rarely stop to ask what a home is actually made of. Yoo forces the question. Her installation suggests that the answer has less to do with materials and more to do with desire, with the accumulated weight of what people want, need, and imagine for themselves and for each other.

Art that treats the domestic as a lens for examining social and cultural forces is nothing new. But Yoo brings something specific to it. Born in Seoul and trained in France, she operates between two very different cultural frameworks around the idea of home, and her practice reflects that quietly felt tension. Her works often feature spaces that feel familiar but refuse to stay solid. Rooms that waver. Houses that float. Structures that appear and then dissolve. It’s a recurring language across her portfolio, and with Dream House, it feels most fully realized.

Dream House is not trying to comfort you. It’s trying to make you notice something. The garments contributed by participants carry real personal weight: literal handwriting, actual drawings, the residue of real lives. And yet the house they form is temporary. It rises, exists briefly, and then it’s gone. Yoo describes the floating structure as embodying both the creative force of desire and the fleeting nature of existence. The house briefly emerges through people’s dreams, and that, apparently, is enough.

I think that’s the most honest thing any artist has said about housing in a long time. We build our ideas of home from desire, from inherited images of what shelter is supposed to look like, from what we were told to want, and from what we quietly imagine when no one is watching. And all of it is more temporary than we tend to admit. The average person moves multiple times in their life. Neighborhoods change. The house you grew up in gets renovated beyond recognition or torn down entirely. The physical structure of home has always been more fragile than we want it to be.

What Yoo does is make that fragility visible without making it tragic. The floating structure is genuinely striking to look at. The garments create a soft, almost organic texture that reads as intimate rather than architectural, which is exactly the point. You’re not looking at a building. You’re looking at a collective act of imagination, briefly held together by shared hope. Jisoo Yoo is an artist worth paying close attention to. Her work doesn’t announce itself loudly, but it asks questions that stick. Dream House is a reminder that the spaces we live in are not neutral. They are built, always, from something we wanted.

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Forget Smart Homes, Moooi Is Designing Homes That Feel Alive

Light moves through trees. Shadows stretch and shrink. No two afternoons ever look quite the same. Moooi wants your living room to borrow that same restlessness. In a conversation with Yanko Design, the Dutch design house laid out a vision for interiors that respond to time, mood and the people living inside them, rather than staying frozen in one fixed arrangement from the day they’re installed.

It is a strange kind of ambition for a furniture brand to have. Strange but brilliant. Moooi has spent 25 years refusing to make boring things, and its next chapter looks less like a product catalog and more like a philosophy for how homes should feel. Not smarter. Not more automated. Just more alive, in the same unpredictable way the outside world already is.

Designer: Moooi

The concept has a name, The Living Room, and it started as a simple question the brand kept circling back to. What if an interior never sat still, but moved through a day the way the world outside a window does, gradually and without announcing itself. Lighting could soften as morning turns to afternoon. Objects could shift subtly in response to who’s in the room and what they’re doing. Nothing about it reads as gimmick or gadgetry, which is deliberate, since Moooi keeps insisting this has nothing to do with sensors or automation. It reads instead like weather indoors, a mood that drifts rather than a setting you toggle. That distinction matters more than it sounds.

Atmosphere has subtly become the real product Moooi sells, and everything else follows from it. The brand says its process now starts with a single question, how do people want to feel the moment they walk in, long before anyone picks a fabric or a finish. That thinking explains why Moooi’s catalog has crept well past furniture and lighting into wallcoverings, carpets, ceramic tiles and even bespoke scent. Each addition exists to thicken the sensory layer of a room rather than decorate its surface. Building a mood board was never the goal. Building an entire world was.

Personalization is where the philosophy stops being poetic and starts getting genuinely strange, in the best sense. Moooi’s collaboration with EveryHuman uses AI to translate a person’s mood into a custom room fragrance, treating scent as another material a designer can shape rather than an afterthought sprayed in before guests arrive. That same instinct extends to digitally printed carpets and layered surfaces built around individual taste instead of a single house style. The brand frames this as giving creative tools to people rather than finished products, which flips the usual furniture relationship on its head. You are not buying a chair here. You are being handed the freedom to keep shaping a space as your own taste evolves.

None of this would land without Moooi’s oldest habit, which the brand still describes as an ambition to stop the boring business. That mantra showed up loudly at the brand’s 25th anniversary installation in Milan this year, a mirrored, multi sensory environment built at Superstudio Più with choreographer Yoann Bourgeois, layering light, movement and scent into something meant to be felt rather than simply viewed. Marcel Wanders has said there’s no one who walks through a Moooi installation feeling nothing, and that stubborn refusal to be neutral is the connective tissue between a 2001 startup and a 2026 AI fragrance experiment.

Where this goes next is of more consequence than where it started. Moooi has been clear that technology should function as another creative material, sitting alongside craft and color rather than steering the whole show. If The Living Room concept ever leaves the realm of installation and lands inside actual homes, it will be a genuinely different pitch than anything coming out of the smart home industry right now. Not a house that watches you. A house that keeps you company.

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5 E Ink Phones in 2026 Ranked by What They Still Ask You to Give Up

E Ink phones have spent years selling one idea: a calmer screen, a longer battery, and a slower relationship with your phone. That promise has almost always come with a catch. You’d get the paper-like display but lose the processing power. You’d get the focus-friendly software but sacrifice half the apps you actually need. The category thrived on convincing buyers that every compromise was worth making.

Bigme’s HiBreak Dual 2 doesn’t improve on the E Ink formula. It changes the question entirely. Pairing a 6.13-inch color E Ink front panel with a 5-inch LCD on the back and running Android 16 on a Dimensity 8300 chip, it removes the old forced choice between paper-like calm and normal smartphone capability. That shift forces every rival to explain what they’re still asking you to give up.

Bigme HiBreak Dual 2

It’s a refreshingly practical premise. When E Ink handles the task, reading, taking notes with the optional stylus, or checking messages, the front panel does the work quietly. When it can’t, the 5-inch LCD on the back handles video calls, maps, or anything that moves too fast for a paper display. You’re not forced to pick a lane. The phone picks it based on what you’re actually doing.

Designer: Bigme

The familiar trade-offs don’t apply anymore. With 12GB of RAM, a 50MP camera, dual SIM 5G, NFC, and Google Play on Android 16, the Dual 2 closes every gap this category used to own. What it still costs is simplicity. A two-screen phone with an optional stylus isn’t a minimalist object, but that’s the honest bargain. The sacrifice shifted from capability to preference, and at $574, that’s an easier trade.

Minimal Phone

Before the HiBreak Dual 2, the Minimal Phone offered what felt like a reasonable compromise: a full Android 14 experience on a 4.3-inch E Ink touchscreen grounded by a physical QWERTY keyboard. Google Play works out of the box, NFC and wireless charging are onboard, and battery life is strong enough that charging feels less urgent. It starts at $499 for 6GB of RAM and 128GB of storage.

Designer: Minimal

The keyboard is the whole identity, and that’s either the appeal or the limitation, depending on who you are. If you prefer typing with actual resistance, this phone still makes a strong case. But after Bigme, the keyboard has to work harder as a justification. It’s no longer the pragmatic path through the category. It’s a deliberate preference, which means it now belongs to a more specific kind of buyer.

Mudita Kompakt

The Mudita Kompakt doesn’t compete on specs and isn’t trying to. It runs a custom OS stripped down to calls, texts, offline maps, music, and not much else. There’s no app store, no browser built for scrolling, just a 4.3-inch E Ink display, a 3,300 mAh battery with up to six days of life, and a phone that genuinely expects to be set down often. It’s available for $399.

Designer: Mudita

What Mudita charges you is breadth. The Offline+ Mode disables every signal at once, including GSM, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, camera, and microphone, which sounds drastic until you realize that’s exactly the point. The trade-off goes beyond app access. It’s the assumption that a phone should keep expanding. For anyone exhausted by that expectation, the Kompakt feels less like a device with missing features and more like one that refused them deliberately.

Light Phone III

The Light Phone III is the most philosophically clear product here, and the only one without E Ink. It runs a 3.2-inch OLED in grayscale, no app store, no browser, and a proprietary OS with a short, curated list of tools. What it does carry is 5G, NFC, and the kind of calm that comes from removing things rather than restraining them. At $799, it’s priced like a considered commitment.

Designer: Light

That clarity is also its challenge. After Bigme, the Light Phone III’s restrictions no longer read as a necessary cost of the category. They read as a position statement. You’re not settling for less because less is all that exists. You’re paying more for less because you’ve decided that’s the better way to live. That’s a meaningful shift, and it makes the Light Phone III a conviction purchase, nothing more.

BOOX Palma 2 Pro

The BOOX Palma 2 Pro sits in its own corner of this category. It’s a 6.13-inch Kaleido 3 color E Ink device running Android 15 with full Google Play access and 8GB of RAM. A hybrid SIM provides 5G data, so you can run messaging apps, make VoIP calls, and browse freely. Native cellular calls and SMS aren’t officially supported, though some users have found workarounds that get reasonably close.

Designer: BOOX

Phone legitimacy is the sacrifice here, which is a harder ask than anything else on this list. But the Palma 2 Pro delivers the best E Ink reading experience in a pocketable form right now. If your communication needs fit through apps like WhatsApp or Google Voice, and you’ve always wanted a reading device that travels independently, it’s a compelling choice at $399 that doesn’t fit any category neatly.

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The Shocking Galaxy Z Fold 8 Ultra Design Details That Will Make Apple Nervous

The Shocking Galaxy Z Fold 8 Ultra Design Details That Will Make Apple Nervous Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 8 Ultra showing its thinner design and anti-reflective screen.

Samsung has officially launched its latest lineup of foldable smartphones and wearables, including the Galaxy Z Fold 8 Ultra, Z Fold 8, Z Flip 8 and Galaxy Watch Ultra 2. These devices bring notable advancements in durability, display technology, and battery performance, aiming to elevate user expectations in both the foldable and wearable markets. The […]

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Apple Sues OpenAI Over 400 Allegedly Poached Engineers

Apple Sues OpenAI Over 400 Allegedly Poached Engineers Split screen showing the Apple and OpenAI logos representing the legal battle.

Apple has filed a lawsuit against OpenAI, alleging intellectual property theft and unethical recruitment practices. The legal filing claims that OpenAI hired over 400 Apple engineers, some of whom allegedly had access to proprietary information, including unreleased product designs and manufacturing techniques. Apple also accuses OpenAI of organizing sessions where sensitive materials, such as internal […]

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