Fair Season reads art fairs as temporary weather systems — concentrations of movement, capital, saturation, and institutional pressure translated into image and language.
As a derivative of The Condition, it inherits environmental sensing and entropy-based variation, but folds in fair-specific signals: location, temporal windows, news mood, and the psychogeographic signatures of each city.
During fair windows, the system generates at the tempo of the event itself — accelerating through preview days, settling into the rhythm of public hours, and decaying as the fair closes. Each surface carries the atmospheric residue of its moment: weather data, air quality, headline sentiment, and the particular light of the host city.
Between fairs, the system rests. What remains is an archive of temporary climates — documents of how concentrated attention warps the air around it.