Galactic travel may soon make it possible to send all of Earth's over-achieving billionaires into space, hopefully never to return.
But if you had to live in a space colony, which one would you choose? Forget the camp futurism of Ray Bradbury, William Gibson's Zion Cluster is much more appealing. Rasta-men, pulsing dub, and a fleet of Soviet-era spacecraft litter his cyberpunk masterpiece 'Neuromancer'. This vision gave Babylon Rocker it's name and inspired a bizarre marriage of Rastafarian iconography and constructivist art.
Printed on beautifully soft American Apparel. Limited edition of 200.
zoltan
8 months ago
Galactic travel may soon make it possible to send all of Earth's over-achieving billionaires into space, hopefully never to return.
But if you had to live in a space colony, which one would you choose? Forget the camp futurism of Ray Bradbury, William Gibson's Zion Cluster is much more appealing. Rasta-men, pulsing dub, and a fleet of Soviet-era spacecraft litter his cyberpunk masterpiece 'Neuromancer'. This vision gave Babylon Rocker it's name and inspired a bizarre marriage of Rastafarian iconography and constructivist art.
Printed on beautifully soft American Apparel. Limited edition of 200.