Entertainment
May 01, 2026
Millennial Rage on Display: ‘Genuine Fake Premium Economy’ Exposes Financial Inequity
The ICA in London launches ‘Genuine Fake Premium Economy’, a stark exhibition by Jenna Bliss, Buck …
The Exhibition Unveiled: ‘Genuine Fake Premium Economy’
Genuine Fake Premium Economy opens at the ICA in London, presenting a bitter, resentful take on the post‑2008 financial world through the eyes of three mid‑80s American artists.
Artists and Their Financial Critique
The trio—Jenna Bliss, Buck Ellison and Jasmine Gregory—use video, light‑box ads and portraiture to lampoon banking, luxury and the myth of meritocracy.
Jenna Bliss: shaky skyline footage with captions like “We survived Y2K but now the real world source code is malfunctioning”.
Buck Ellison: fictional wealth advisory Orlo & Co paired with classical paintings and slogans such as “In the hands of the few, for the good of the many”.
Jasmine Gregory: luxury‑watch ads stripped of watches, exposing inheritance and the looming cost of everyday life.
Numbers Behind the Show
Venue: ICA, London
Run dates: 1 May – 5 July 2026
Opening hours: 10 am–6 pm, weekdays
Why This Resonates with a Generation
The exhibition channels millennial anger at a system that promised “boundless possibility” before the 2008 crash and delivered “stagnant wages, soaring bills and record‑breaking oil profits”. It translates abstract economic grievances into visceral visual language, making the critique accessible beyond art‑world insiders.
Looking Ahead: Art’s Role in Financial Discourse
As younger audiences demand transparency, shows like this may spur more institutions to program work that interrogates wealth, privilege and systemic risk. Expect a rise in data‑driven installations and collaborations with economists, turning galleries into forums for public debate.
#Jenna Bliss
#Buck Ellison
#Jasmine Gregory
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