Ask Alexa when are we all gonna die tomorrow
First edition of Ask Alexa when are we all gonna die tomorrow by Annie Collinge(2026)
First impression
Small format hard cover in new condition
Signed print tipped to rear of book
Pages clean, binding firm
The first edition is limited to 200 hand numbered copies
About
Beloved for whimsical images that make everyday objects appear otherworldly, the British-American photographer Annie Collinge’s new series turns the lens to her own child. Named for an existential Post-it note she once found at her son’s bedside, Ask Alexa When are we all gonna die tomorrow :-) explores the absurd detritus of childhood, using flash photography to render everything from bubble baths to toy pianos as disconcertingly vivid and fantastical.
Collinge avoids sentimental tropes, saying: “I wanted to resist [cliche] and do something more real, more like the way I take photographs of adults and of accumulation, and the strange comfort of asking a device in the corner of the room a question it cannot possibly answer.”
Original: $80.52
-65%$80.52
$28.18








Description
First edition of Ask Alexa when are we all gonna die tomorrow by Annie Collinge(2026)
First impression
Small format hard cover in new condition
Signed print tipped to rear of book
Pages clean, binding firm
The first edition is limited to 200 hand numbered copies
About
Beloved for whimsical images that make everyday objects appear otherworldly, the British-American photographer Annie Collinge’s new series turns the lens to her own child. Named for an existential Post-it note she once found at her son’s bedside, Ask Alexa When are we all gonna die tomorrow :-) explores the absurd detritus of childhood, using flash photography to render everything from bubble baths to toy pianos as disconcertingly vivid and fantastical.
Collinge avoids sentimental tropes, saying: “I wanted to resist [cliche] and do something more real, more like the way I take photographs of adults and of accumulation, and the strange comfort of asking a device in the corner of the room a question it cannot possibly answer.”