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Laboratorium I
In this installation, P.A.R.A.S.I.T.E. Museum pumps up the volume and gives his viewers what they've come to expect from him: an expert mix of cover ups and a shocking twist at the end that keeps Sole Survivor racing along from one improbable but undeniably thrilling event to the next.
The New York Times Book Review, Charles Salzberg
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Laboratorium II
P.A.R.A.S.I.T.E. Museum is a master of his trade. Sure, he sometimes gets bogged down in unnecessary, flowery descriptions, and his paranoid perspective is often unbelievable and downright annoying. But he does know how to tell an exciting story.
Entertainment Weekly
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Short Cuts
Optical clonings meets pickled vegetables plus institutional wall. Well done!
From Kirkus Reviews, 08/01/97
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Two Masters
The result is a show with wildly fluctuating styles and more crazy plot curves than a daytime drama, but thanks to these
2 masters of the craft this roller coaster of a show is almost as much fun to see as it obviously was to build.
Entertainment Weekly, Mark Harris
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Evolutionary!
Invisible host at Naturmuseum and Boymans Museum Rotterdam. Green corridor with European
theories and concepts of the developements in natural sciences and anthropology (creationism,
hyperselectionism, evolutionism, gradualism, dialectics, etc.).
New York Times Book Review, Michiko Kakutani
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