BUBBLE TROUBLE
BUBBLE TROUBLE
Curation by Curatyy™: Narrative Depth 10/10 - Multiple layers: art, science, satire - Topical Relevance 10/10 - Spot-on with today’s green tech debate. A glowing sphere drifts over a Nordic street—peaceful pedestrians below, unaware. But this isn't beauty; it's a battery.
“Bubble Trouble” critiques blind electrification, asking:
Are we trading fossil guilt for lithium silence?
No AI fluff—Digital art with teeths: Presenting: BUBBLE TROUBLE Welcome to: @klemenza.art aka @Morten Klementsen
Recognized as Lurzer's 'Top 10' Digital Artist: 2025
🚀 15k x 15k. 600 dpi. Created with AI + power digital refinement
Youtube: https://youtu.be/0c-qfMgC2tgWebshop ORIGINALS: https://www.klemenza.art
BUBBLE TROUBLE - Limited Edition of 50: https://www.saatchiart.com/en-no/account/profile/2834889
#BubbleTroubleArt #StaticHeart #GreenIllusion #NordicCritique
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Story:
In one of our Nordic cities, bubble trouble arose, which is the result of too many electric cars in the city. The research leader at the Institute for Radical Electricity Innovation (IRE), quickly came to the pedestrian street where this happened. People are used to what used to be strange objects. This bubble containing undischarged induction current could have injured those walking in the street. But few reacted. This could have been a clever advertising stunt, from a Cola Brand. Unreleased energy is created, collected in a bubble, similar to ball lightning, says Professor Hreidar Hannson of RER. Fortunately, the pedestrian zone was closed and the enormous amounts of unreleased electricity were safely drained from the bubble. Here, there was enough for a whole year's consumption for the medium-sized city encapsulated in an "advertising bubble" with LED lights. The development of electronics and electrical products has progressed rapidly in recent years, and even though most of it is for our common good, we humans should be vigilant. For security reasons, I am not allowed to mention the city by name, but this could happen again, but it is a rare event, says IRE's local representative. It is a good thing no one was in direct contact with the bubble.