Branded Trash: (In)Voluntary Product Displacement

Friday 4 October 2024 » Sunday 20 October 2024
Billboards
Billboards
Gorizia / Italy

Highlights

DSC_6250
DSC_6242
DSC_6237
DSC_6215
DSC_6204
DSC_6198
DSC_6156
filter
Exhibition_Branded-Tash-Billboard-13
DSC_6117
swan+more
canntantonio
DSC_6022
DSC_6041
DSC_5975
DSC_6015
lasko
pasante_caprin
00_DSC_6026
boccaccio_BUDWEISER
mactrash
Danifica_2
DSC_6089
macbag
DSC_6075
DSC_6086
DSC_6067
DSC_6064
DSC_6049
costa
Kronenburg
DSC_6020
KFC_UPSIDE
coconut
tumblr_492e72ad025c445f4084c33c955e978b_6d691401_2048 (1)
previous arrow
next arrow



Branded Trash: (In)voluntary Product Displacement – Iteration #4 – City-wide Exhibition in Gorizia

Branded Trash, a project by the photographer and artist Enrico Policardo, explores the intersection of consumer culture, advertising, and waste, focusing on how branded litter scattered across city streets or rural areas becomes an involuntary and omnipresent form of advertising. The project photographs various types of discarded objects branded with corporate logos, challenging viewers to reconsider the invisibility of waste in urban spaces and highlighting a paradox: even trash, before being elevated to the status of billboards, serves as genuine advertising.

By subtly integrating itself into the urban landscape, the exhibition blurs the lines between public space, advertising, and art, aiming to provoke reflection among passersby on the roles of consumers and companies in the waste cycle.

This iteration will be spread throughout the city, starting on 4th October 2024 and culminating between 17th and 18th October 2024 during the ReThinkable Festival, with the unveiling of a final large-scale billboard on Via Formica. This billboard will serve as the visual opener, with the installation being treated as a performance in itself.

The final act of the billboard installation, carried out by a team of public workers, becomes a crucial part of the exhibition. This “performance” is a deliberate nod to the invisible labour involved in installing advertising, serving as a metaphor for how we overlook waste in daily life. By turning this mundane task into a spectacle, the exhibition asks viewers to reconsider the value and visibility of both waste and advertising. This act will be documented and will form a critical part of the exhibition’s narrative.

Stop Telling Me to Buy Crap

As consumers, we are often involved in the process of producing waste, but companies bear a significant responsibility in the lifecycle of their products. This project highlights the fact that waste is a passive and insidious form of advertising, freely granted to companies as a byproduct of consumerism. It challenges viewers to confront this reality, exposing the hidden costs of our throwaway culture.

Product displacement refers to the practice of replacing or mimicking real brands and products in media, such as films, TV shows, or art, to avoid trademark issues, provide social commentary, or critique consumer culture. Unlike product placement, where real brands pay to appear, product displacement involves fictionalised or parodied representations. These often serve to highlight social issues tied to consumption or brand influence, maintaining a critical distance from direct corporate involvement.

Previous Exhibitions

  • Kensington & Chelsea Art Week (KCAW 2020): The project debuted at KCAW’s Little Voices, an event focused on climate change and social inequalities. 1
  • Climate Action & Visual Culture: The work expanded into a more academic exploration at the University of Huddersfield as part of the Climate Action & Visual Culture programme. 1// 2
  • Branded Trash Book (2022): A photographic book was published, blending images, reflections, and textual commentary on the project. 1

— — — — —

The project is produced in collaboration with the ReThinkable Festival and funded with the support of Regione Friuli Venezia-Giulia, Italy

ReThinkable Festival
Regione Friuli Venezia-Giulia

Further details: Branded Trash – Artist’s Page

Loading Map....