How Liminalism Became the Defining Aesthetic of Our Time
zeech
34 points
20 comments
June 07, 2026
Related Discussions
Found 5 related stories in 100.4ms across 10,500 title embeddings via pgvector HNSW
- A 1960s art school experiment that redefined creativity pseudolus · 88 pts · April 30, 2026 · 48% similar
- Dynamics of (Not) Being Perceived: Grief and Relief After Leaving Social Media glovink · 21 pts · April 05, 2026 · 44% similar
- Designing for and against the manufactured normalcy field (2012) nvader · 16 pts · May 26, 2026 · 44% similar
- On Labubu and the Hyperreal 2earth · 78 pts · May 27, 2026 · 44% similar
- 'Backrooms' and the Rise of the Institutional Gothic anarbadalov · 188 pts · April 02, 2026 · 43% similar
Discussion Highlights (10 comments)
dvt
Calling liminalism the "defining" aesthetic of our time is a bit much (though I get the article is trying to hitch its wagon to the Backrooms, aka the "current popular thing"). It's an aesthetic microniche, about as popular as vaporwave, or cyberpunk, grunge, or Y2K (think flip phones, bulky plastic cameras, etc.). There's a ton of these, and some are surprising: for example, there's even been a relatively recent revival of the "old-money" aesthetic, especially motivated by fashion brands like Rowing Blazers, etc.
royal__
Interesting article, but calling it THE defining aesthetic of our time feels a bit sensational.
mystraline
Ive always felt that the Art World seems to talk in its own tone. And that tone is arrogant, looking down on people, and haughtiness. Words dont mean with the Art World as they normally do. And definitions are scarce, since you are expected to innately know them, or be 'out'.
kaycebasques
> The image exemplifies the popular internet aesthetic of “liminality”: the exploration of spaces that appear “in between,” that are uncanny and uncomfortable despite being mundane or familiar. Liminal in the context of liminal dreaming has very different emotional connotations. Liminal dreaming is the state where you are beginning to fall asleep but are not quite there (hence liminal because you're on the border between awake and asleep). You can also experience it at the end of a sleep as you transition back into being awake. It's a flowing place where colors, shapes, and sounds keep morphing in very interesting and often beautiful ways. Unlike lucid dreaming there is no notion of being in control. Supposedly this was a secret to the creativity of Dali. He would sit in a chair with some keys in his hand and allow himself to drift off. When he fell asleep the keys would fall out of his hand, hit the floor, and the sound would wake him up. Then he would draw whatever he had been imagining during the liminal dreaming right there on the spot. Edison supposedly also had a similar trick. Supposedly. I have sometimes imagined some really beautiful (and catchy!) music but I've never been able to remember it in detail after waking.
keiferski
A few years ago I spent awhile researching liminality for a blog post: https://onthearts.com/p/what-are-liminal-spaces-and-why-are I don’t think it’s as directly attributable to “late capitalism,” as the article suggests. I speculated on a few ideas: - We Have No “Coming-of-Age” Rituals - Nostalgia - Our Cities are Transportation Networks - Modern Political Systems are Extremely Liminal - The Death of God - We Lack a Process-Oriented Language Anyway you might find it interesting!
officialchicken
Yeah, no. I'd say we're still looking for the most inexpensive variant of Modernism 125+ years after it's introduction - aesthetic driven entirely by the capabilities of machines that created it, embodied by Apple, every look-alike 4-door SUV, and anticontextual urban ruins of oversized-tiled econoboxes warehouses.
Invictus0
A lot of the images in the article aren't actually that liminal
floren
Liminalism? Nah thanks sorry I'm into littoralism these days, give me coastlines and beaches.
t0lo
Except for the fact that modern design aesthetic has eliminated spaces with an uncontrolled and ambient vibe. Which makes this article bs.
timr
It's so weird to open a page on HN and see a photo of a place that I went to all the time as a child, but as some kind of abandoned-space porn for Zoomers (Century III mall).