You are using an outdated browser. Please upgrade your browser to improve your experience.
Your Fate

YOUR FATE is a collaborative project created by the artists Allan McCollum and Matt Mullican, in which repetitive action and chance outcomes converge in the form of a fortune-telling dice game

YOUR FATE is a collaborative project created by the artists Allan McCollum and Matt Mullican, in which repetitive action and chance outcomes converge in the form of a fortune-telling dice game

Your Fate

by Galerie Thomas Schulte
Your Fate
Your Fate
Your Fate

What is it about?

YOUR FATE is a collaborative project created by the artists Allan McCollum and Matt Mullican, in which repetitive action and chance outcomes converge in the form of a fortune-telling dice game.

Your Fate

App Details

Version
1.0
Rating
NA
Size
141Mb
Genre
Casual
Last updated
August 8, 2024
Release date
July 10, 2022
More info

App Screenshots

Your Fate screenshot-0
Your Fate screenshot-1
Your Fate screenshot-2
Your Fate screenshot-3
Your Fate screenshot-4
Your Fate screenshot-5
Your Fate screenshot-6

App Store Description

YOUR FATE is a collaborative project created by the artists Allan McCollum and Matt Mullican, in which repetitive action and chance outcomes converge in the form of a fortune-telling dice game.

After the project was exhibited with Christine Burgin Gallery, New York in 2004 and Galerie Thomas Schulte in 2022, it is now being launched in a digital version in form of this app developed by Apolune and Galerie Thomas Schulte.

The way the game works:
1. Prepare yourself to throw the dice, for example by thinking of a question.
2. Swipe the 25 dice from any point on the screen.
3. Look at the dice that fell with a sign facing up, these are the signs that can help you with your question. The red die represents you, its position indicates how the signs relate to you.
4. Tap on the die for interpretation suggestions.

The dice feature a unique collection of symbols that are largely based on generic signs and logos from everyday life. Through the suggested interpretations of these universal symbols, players are addressed individually. Essentially, it is along this edge that Allan McCollum’s and Matt Mullican’s artistic practice so often teeters: oscillating from individual to universal, specific to general, part to whole.

More information on this project is available at galeriethomasschulte.de and allanmccollum.net.

Disclaimer:
AppAdvice does not own this application and only provides images and links contained in the iTunes Search API, to help our users find the best apps to download. If you are the developer of this app and would like your information removed, please send a request to takedown@appadvice.com and your information will be removed.