Yummy Teen!
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Dates2023 - Ongoing
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Author
Yummy (Teen Edition!) is a fictional teen girl magazine created by artist Elizabeth Renstrom in collaboration with designer Elena Foraker and writer Coralie Kraft. For the series, issues were printed, collaged, & photographed in situ (teen girl bedroom)
Anchored by the pages and images of three issues of a fictional magazine titled Yummy (Teen Edition)—which Renstrom created in collaboration with designer Elena Foraker and writer Coralie Kraft—the series interrogates our individual and collective relationship with mass media as well as the ways in which media representation shapes identity, for better or for worse.
In this case, Yummy (Teen Edition)’s glossy images and catchy headlines were created entirely through AI—a model trained on a generation’s media consumption and synthesizing an imaginary world set in the realities of the early 2000s. Fashion spreads, photographs of teen heartthrobs, and dogmatic advice columns reflect the value systems promoted through media culture in the early aughts, reproduced perhaps as readily and uncritically by an AI model as they were consumed by young readers at the time. Brightly colored headlines, advertisements for beauty products, diet and exercise tips, and a homogenous array of teen faces fill magazine covers and interior pages in a context that is both dated and yet still reflective of much of today’s media culture. Targeted specifically to young women, these pages recall and reinforce a shaping of ideas about diet culture, desire, and self-presentation, while also underlining the inherently sexist, fatphobic, and racist themes present throughout.
A second component of the series is a group of images that Renstrom created by rephotographing the issues of Yummy (Teen Edition), and situating them within a real domestic space. These self-referential works present a look at the feedback loop informing young girls, as they mold their own identities and private spaces and then project them into the world. The series reminds us of all the ways in which “disposable” media can endure—shaping how we see ourselves and warping how we perceive an ideal. Though some of these pressures are timeless, the looming gaze of AI underscores the transformative––and unsettling––new forces guiding how we remember, perceive and imagine.