HAUS NOWHERE and Max Siedentopf Unveil Surreal “More Is More” Installation

by OS Staff
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Step inside HAUS NOWHERE and you’re not really in a store—you’re in a fever dream dressed up as retail. The experimental wing of Gentle Monster, already known for unleashing cyborg sculptures and pastry-draped buildings, has now doubled down with its most bizarre creation yet: a collaboration with cult artist and director Max Siedentopf, unveiled in Seoul.

The installation, called “More Is More,” looks like consumer excess made flesh. A heaving mountain of black garbage bags rises and falls as if breathing, a grotesque monument to everything we buy, hoard, and throw away. Perched in the chaos is an old man gripping a lone golden bag, his mechanical eyes scanning the room with uncanny precision. In other versions, anonymous figures sink faceless into the trash, swallowed by the mound. The whole thing feels like a fashion apocalypse staged as theatre—darkly funny, deeply unsettling, and impossible to ignore.

This isn’t just visual spectacle. By merging art, tech, and design, HAUS NOWHERE is rewriting the blueprint for what a brand space can be: not a showroom, but a living installation, a cultural attraction in its own right. Paired with Gentle Monster’s own futuristic concepts, the project folds consumerism into performance, blurring the boundaries between gallery and shopping floor.

Now showing in Seoul, Dosan, Shanghai, and ShenzhenMore Is More is less about selling sunglasses than staging a cultural mood: the end of minimalism, the chaos of excess, and the absurd theatre of modern retail.

Photos: HAUS NOWHERE / Max Siedentopf

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