How do I order?

1Go to ours
2Choose your product. Pay safely and conveniently online with us.
3Delivery is in 1-2 working days, Within Germany Delivery for free

Support Hours

Mon-Fri 8: 00 - 20: 00 CET
0049 (0) 7725 / 9193-75

FORGOT YOUR PASSWORD?

*

Alice Peachy Unknown Outsider Repack -

Orchestrates the transition from a sterile medical procedural to sci-fi horror. 3. Thematic Analysis: Reason vs. The Unknowable

If Alice Peachy is alive, she has chosen silence with a discipline most monks would envy. If she is dead, her work is her only resurrection.

In this specific installment, Alice Peachy is portrayed as a forensic scientist

Alice keeps a "Library of the Unclaimed"—shelves of objects she’s found that no one will admit to losing. A wedding ring found in a bird’s nest, a key that fits no door in town, and a photograph of a family that doesn't exist. The Outsider:

Peach, however, “sat around a world without hierarchies, one that ends right where it begins”. This environment nurtured a worldview free from traditional power structures, fostering a sense of egalitarianism that permeates her art. Where many artists attempt to climb the ladder of the establishment, Peach’s early surroundings trained her to reject the ladder entirely. Her work is not about dominating a gallery space; it is about occupying it alongside the viewer, on equal footing.

But for those who are here now, in the quiet digital backrooms, is more than a mystery. She is a permission slip. She tells a generation of over-exposed creators that it is okay to be unknown. It is okay to create for the sake of creating, to leave your art on a park bench and walk away, to be the outsider looking in.

Despite having exhibited across Germany, Italy, Switzerland, and Bulgaria, Peach remains largely unknown to the mainstream public. Her ranking on ArtFacts places her among the “Top 1,000,000” artists globally—a statistic that, in the era of billion-view influencers, firmly establishes her as a niche figure. But as we shall see, this obscurity is not an accident; it is an essential component of her philosophy.

The book invites the viewer to “connect the dots” like a children’s puzzle, navigating the blurry line between intimacy and the impersonal urban landscape. It is a diary of objects, food, interiors, faces, and frozen rural moments.

The defining characteristic of Alice Peachy is her status as the "unknown." In many narratives, mystery is an alluring quality; for Alice, it is a form of erasure. She is the classmate whose name is half-remembered on roll calls, the group project partner who fades into the background texture of the library, the pedestrian on the street who blurs into the scenery. To be unknown, in Alice’s world, is not to be mysterious—it is to be invisible. She serves as a mirror to the insecurities of others, reflecting a fear of ordinariness that most people spend their lives trying to outrun. By refusing to perform or project a personality, she becomes a blank canvas onto which others project their indifference.

TOP