When I was a kid I used to have dreams about impossible pools, though they were a lot less barren these ones. They always felt very serene and fun. It brings back
@toomuchglitters72542 жыл бұрын
Me too! I was also able to breath in them but only a few breaths or so before I had to come up for air lol
@helo68242 жыл бұрын
Yes, I does indeed bring back
@drestonjclaw28392 жыл бұрын
Same omg
@mothxcat97002 жыл бұрын
I thought I was the only one who had dreams about those! It’s really fascinating to see others having the same dreams as I did
@brbla92 жыл бұрын
SAAMEE
@noyza21322 жыл бұрын
for me, these pictures never felt like i was forced to be there. it feels like a place i shouldn't be; kinda like a construction site or a movie set, but it never felt like a punishment like prison or purgatory. i chose to be here. theres a deep feeling of "nobody is here, i probably shouldn't be here too", and at the same time the environment is urging me to keep going farther, deeper into them.
@DirtyRatBoy2 жыл бұрын
It kinda feels like me and someone else went someone we weren’t supposed to be, but they left me alone by myself. It would be fine when I wasn’t alone, but now it doesn’t feel safe anymore
@birdcar78082 жыл бұрын
In the Piranesi book, Piranesi also doesn’t perceive himself as a prisoner. He also doesn’t perceive himself to be trespassing in the House, rather believing himself to be a natural part of it, and even thinks he was there for his entire life. However, the captor who trapped him in the empty halls, does perceive him as a prisoner. Interestingly, when Piranesi finally remembers his life before the House, it takes him a long time before he’s ready to leave it and return to the real world. Just thought that was interesting
@cameronfarley59102 жыл бұрын
Like a well lit tunnel that's partially flooded or other such abandoned places. It's a place that's been forgotten, but still remains.
@blockgunk2 жыл бұрын
Well, if nobody is there, why can't you be the first? At least, that's how I like to think about it.
@fluute26202 жыл бұрын
It's familiar yet strange kind of like when someone types a message in a language you understand when you don't expect it, like in a foreign country, or in a KZbin Comment section.. נכון..?
@SirZechs772 жыл бұрын
I love looking at dreampools, something about the combination of the excitement of exploration and peaceful loneliness is deeply relaxing to me
@supercholita24722 жыл бұрын
Totally! It’s not scary.. I would like to visit it.
@Jjun4362 жыл бұрын
What if your not alone
@mr.lag1secondago1242 жыл бұрын
Yes
@mr.lag1secondago1242 жыл бұрын
I feel like im in heaven or something it also look like what will i dream of
@YourLocalYter2 жыл бұрын
ARENA MODE ACTIVATED *round 1 begin*
@howdarethou43532 жыл бұрын
I find it odd that before ever hearing of this community and aesthetic of art I was also fascinated by large empty pool rooms and even drew some of my own. Seeing now that I wasn't alone in this oddly specific -core is definitely strange.
@DissonanceEngineer2 жыл бұрын
It's some kind of shared archetype, as to what it means specifically I'm not sure, but there's definitely something to it or it wouldn't resonate with so many.
@about80crickets2 жыл бұрын
These rooms must be the server farms for the simulation
@SauloA3332 жыл бұрын
The synchronicities have hitted us all brother. Even in our thoughts we aren't really alone, we're always next to someone.
@boejudden90112 жыл бұрын
I find it comforting that the human palette of imagination is pretty universal. I definitely don't think it "means" anything other than the fact that we're all mostly similar
@marcofarberr2 жыл бұрын
I don't think anybody watching this would think that you just started making videos a few months ago
@Nightshade_goblin2 жыл бұрын
Thank you, senpai
@shortberry_strawcake38772 жыл бұрын
..wait he did?? Bro this is so well made :0
@marcofarberr2 жыл бұрын
@@shortberry_strawcake3877 yeah man, the sovietwave video he released 5 months ago was the first one he ever edited. I had to show him how to use the software back then
@LakeDuria2 жыл бұрын
He did WHAT?
@SpiralAnimationssssss2 жыл бұрын
Honestly, if ever I was to swim in one of these pools, truly alone and with only the sound of water and my own breathing accompanying me, ricocheting off of the walls around me, I would constantly be watching my back. I would never feel safe... There's a sense of unease that comes to me when I'm alone, as if I'm being deceived, and my fear of the unknown would chase me out of that pool very quickly. This is why, when I see these images, a feeling of discomfort and anxiety comes over me, which overpowers the tranquility. It feels almost... to good to be true.
@strawber3seal_772 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I feel that
@topiaz2 жыл бұрын
oh look, a comment i cam relate to Honestly, I don't get how these things are relaxing to people. Anything could appear at any moment.. at any place. and you wouldn't know
@orionskittles2 жыл бұрын
I’ve seen some images of dreampools that look comforting but most of them, I agree with what you said
@Germ4962 жыл бұрын
ive never been so fond of an analysis video before. people often describe dream pools as uncomfortable or scary, but i take a lot of comfort in these pictures. can't get enough of these empty, yet extremely beautiful pool waters.
@trackernivrig2 жыл бұрын
I don't know what it is about them, but looking at these images makes me really really uneasy. I also feel that desire to want to explore it, but man it's just unsettling for some reason.
@thebagofsalt2 жыл бұрын
@@trackernivrig i find them unsettling because there is no way out in any of these pictures and i can't really visualize them being here
@mr.lag1secondago1242 жыл бұрын
Tbh i like that lonly feel
@Alansaurus2 жыл бұрын
I completely agree! I actually wrote a poem based off of these images because they brought me so much comfort in a very odd way, but I completely understand the fear of dread from them
@tm01292 жыл бұрын
@@trackernivrig for me the emptiness is unsettling but also very serene. it almost feels like you're in some kind of afterlife. just exploring infinitely with no way out but also nothing to bother you
@Kittkrash2 жыл бұрын
As a kid, I occasionally experienced episodes of delirium where the space around me seemed to expand into infinity. Sometimes it was just a normal room, the space inside growing absurdly large and empty, but I also remember one where I was simply tumbling down an endlessly tall, grassy hill, and another where I was floating on a turbulent ocean of white noise (like the monochrome static of a dead channel on old CRT TVs). Always the same feeling, but sometimes a different interpretation of it. You know when you see a candle flame flickering and getting tossed about by wind? I felt like I was the flame, like I could be snuffed out at any moment and there was nothing I could do about it, no way to escape or calm the air around me so I could be safe and in control. If not that, I could be carried off, end up lost and never find home again. It was terrifying, and I would cry uncontrollably until it was over. In adulthood, I've always been fascinated and drawn to depictions of liminal, surreal, infinite spaces. Even though the places in them are often serene or at least calm and quiet, I feel like there's some sort of connection with those childhood experiences. In retrospect it felt like I wasn't seeing a literal place, but maybe my brain was just trying to process a concept or an entity that was beyond human comprehension or our limited sense of scale. There's no panic anymore; it's a weird source of comfort and even yearning now, and maybe that means I'm subconsciously closer to coming to terms with whatever that higher concept is. Whether it represents infinity, death, some sort of god, the universe itself, or just a short circuit somewhere in my head? I still have no idea.
@dannyfoxboi2 жыл бұрын
Did you ever get your delirium check out by a doctor or a psychiatrist? (This is a genuine question. I have no intention of sounding rude.)
@Kittkrash2 жыл бұрын
@@dannyfoxboi I never saw anyone about it, and always just thought of them as bad dreams. This was something that only happened a handful of times, long enough ago that I wouldn't even be able to tell you how old I was the last time it happened. Early childhood, maybe elementary school I think. To be clear though, I don't genuinely believe that there was any supernatural component to them. I just have a thing for art and media that conveys this sort of overwhelming sense of scale for conjuring a similar feeling in me, and it's fun to weave potential connections around that.
@YourLocalYter2 жыл бұрын
I have similar things happen too, when I close my eyes and shake my head on my pillow it brings me to a Dark grey plane that's just infinite.
@pyrotection2 жыл бұрын
I have occasionally experienced dreams about the likes of what delirium you described, I would like to say when I looked back on them they were much more agonizing then when I experienced them. I will take an example that is about “dreampools”. In my dream, I am sent to a place similar to my Turkish hometown but it contains a never-ending column of pools and I have only instinct that tells me to walk. I walk, and walk and these blue tiled pools take up more and more of my head, I thought that was reality and at that point just had no will to feel about what I was seeing, probably why it was more frightening in hindsight. I woke up there.
@wot48982 жыл бұрын
When I was a kid I was walking through a market and all of a sudden the whole place was a huge desert with little shops all over. Even thought there are no deserts where I live.
@glanni2 жыл бұрын
I've actually been to a pool+spa that looks a lot like many of these. It was wonderful. They even had a dome in the middle of one area of the pool and it could only be accessed through the water, naturally. It had an amazing echo effect and colorful lights. That whole spa was one dream tbh. But very pricey so I couldn't go there more than twice.
@daydene.63562 жыл бұрын
what was the place called and where is it
@glanni2 жыл бұрын
@@daydene.6356 There's actually 2 places in Austria, Bad Hofgastein and Kaprun. But upon looking them up I just realized I mixed the two places up in my memory. The indoor dome structure was in Kaprun, and in Bad Hofgastein there was a canal with a tunnel, and a few water jets, where they gave out huge rubber rings that you could float on top of. It's kinda disappointing that I can't find a picture of the inside of that dome, you can only see the outside sticking out like a tube, with a hot tub on top of it, and you can also see the hole to swim through in there, but not the inside, sadly. I guess the ad photographers didn't want to make their fancy cameras wet. (Also disclaimer, most of the pool areas look pretty normal, but there's a few cool places which was where I remember playing the most in because they were the only fun areas lol)
@phalamy91802 жыл бұрын
These thing really made me bring back to how i felt exploring as a child. Whenever i saw a big arch, a closed door or a strange dark alley, it always felt like, if i just went there, went through that gate, it would go on forever. It felt like if i stepped through it would take me to whetever place my child head believed would make sense for it to lead to, usually ammounting to a jumbled mass of nonsense geometry of repeating pattern. Whenever i thought of something i decided wasn't right i always considered how it would work for long times sometimes even falling into a nonsense loop until just moving on. I still feel the desire to go there. To those nonsense places my child mind envisioned. Like those Dream pools. I just... want to be there. See it. Wander on and on.
@gregbroyles32402 жыл бұрын
this
@player0ne162 жыл бұрын
the first dreampool image i saw, i thought it was a real place. all of these images are incredibly well done and i applaud the person that made them
@Mae_Borowski2 жыл бұрын
When I was little I once had a dream I went to a theme park, maybe it was just a water park, but at all times you would be in water. Always shallow but just enough to swim in and that's always kind of fascinated me and I almost wished it existed. Is it practical? Hell no, but it's an interesting idea. Strangely for me I don't get any sort of haunting or anxious feeling looking at these images despite their barren liminal atmosphere. I just keep thinking to myself how much I'd like to visit them if they were real
@BritishGtag12332 жыл бұрын
i like to think the so called "windows" are just a realistic PNG image showing clouds in an absolute crystal clear light blue sky
@Nightshade_goblin2 жыл бұрын
*insert windows startup sound
@toekneemart55972 жыл бұрын
I saw some of them almost as watersides in some of these pictures
@luskinhasv34672 жыл бұрын
i just imagine a white bright void
@InfernoPlus2 жыл бұрын
Really enjoyed this video. I stumbled upon the liminal spaces stuff recently and it really left a weird feeling in my mind that I can't quite place. Something that kind of defies the labels of 'good or bad'. It's very odd.
@jake_mackinnon2 жыл бұрын
Hey man, funny to stumble across you here. Love your videos. Liminal spaces definitely offer a unique sublime experience.
@pouncelygrin66992 жыл бұрын
eyyyy Inferno, you too huh? xD
@zacharytrosch34062 жыл бұрын
Something that kind of defies the labels of 'good or bad'. Well put.
@wittich_tara2 жыл бұрын
Wait... These are renders? I actually thought these were real places you can visit! It Looks so realistic! Woah!
@Danuxsy2 жыл бұрын
😂😂
@nunyabiznes332 жыл бұрын
That actually make me sad these can't be visited
@Corasz2 жыл бұрын
@@nunyabiznes33 same
@patricknoble29112 жыл бұрын
Seems like a job for VR
@hithere70802 жыл бұрын
@@patricknoble2911 you can visit some of them in a roblox game
@VANITREE2 жыл бұрын
I have a strange phobia of man-made objects interacting with water, pictures of sunken ships and even pool drains fill me with a dreadful feeling. But, strangely, these dream pools are so serene to me. I don't know why. They look so warm and comforting, despite that severe fear in the back of my mind of them. I've never seen art that has had this kind of effect on me before.
@gusty71532 жыл бұрын
it makes sense to me. you aren't afraid of the pools themselves. your just afraid of the things that just so happen to be in the pools. specifically mechanical things...if i assume correctly
@VANITREE2 жыл бұрын
@@gusty7153 no, not quite. It's more like the unnatural combination of nature and machines. It just gives me chills to see human-made things interacting with water, especially for a long period of time. One of the worst things for me is seeing old anchors and chains covered in algae and sea-organisms. I know it doesn't make much sense to other people, but it genuinely sparks my fight or flight response.
@gusty71532 жыл бұрын
@@VANITREE oh hrrm
@anapaulabibiano53462 жыл бұрын
Submecanophobia moment.
@ringomandingo10152 жыл бұрын
@@VANITREE Maybe you’re not afraid of the pool structures because they’re just shapes stripped of any defining features outside of being pool tiles. Subconsciously, you’re not recognizing the steps and columns as man-made since they are blank.
@rafora_2 жыл бұрын
i like these pictures. unlike the other liminal spaces, they feel so safe and peaceful somehow...
@7k7ake2 жыл бұрын
I love these pictures so much!! I remember I’d always imagine myself sitting in places like these. The water usually went up to the shoulder. The only difference was that it was always raining. It was very comforting. Whenever I see these images I just want to jump inside of them and sit there… I don’t have a desire to explore. I just want to be there.
@7k7ake2 жыл бұрын
I think when I was younger I made a story about a kid who ended up getting caught up in a place that was very similar to the dream pools. Poolcore wasn’t a thing back then, so I used a picture of a flooded city to visualize my thoughts. Maybe I’ll revisit it.
@natasha_anstee96462 жыл бұрын
I find your video essays so interesting to watch - they bring really new, interesting ideas and you present them very eloquently with a relaxing voice that well matches the tone
@Nightshade_goblin2 жыл бұрын
thxx. You can always recommend topics btw (can't promise I'll do them tho)
@joaoedu19652 жыл бұрын
I think this looks like what an AI thinks a swimming pool is, like it generated the pools themselves in a physical space and the people haven't entered yet.
@chukyuniqul2 жыл бұрын
Or something inhuman that apes at humanity. Like the entity in dead by daylight and its maps. There's also a game you might wanna look into if you wanna explore liminal spaces and it's called anemoiapolis. Pretty cool game. Gives the same feeling.
@usedtobekrampus2 жыл бұрын
10:16 this is probably my new favorite atmospheric quotes. Edit: this whole video is great but this concept of infinite variating rooms is exactly my vibe, very inspiring
@KeruuKat2 жыл бұрын
Check out The Backrooms then! Similar vibe. There's a wiki like SCP has but it gets cheesy fast. Dreamcore or weirdcore might also be up your alley!
@minte19722 жыл бұрын
Just ordered that book after hearing just that quote. Seen it mentioned in other limnal type videos already.
@joe_krogan2 жыл бұрын
I've had dreams similar to these images that have stuck in my memory for over a decade because of how surreal and alien they felt. Wandering alone through impossible architecture. The environment hits that uncanny valley level and it almost seems like your surroundings are a skinwalker version of what you would expect a man-made environment to look like. The maze is eternal. There is nothing outside the windows. When you look out, you just see blinding white light, their only purpose to provide lighting. There's always a feeling of being watched yet no evidence of any other living entity in this strange warped realm. The freaky part is how many parallels there are with my experiences with deep dreams and everything described about liminal spaces and projected through this type of 'backrooms art'. It must be some kind of strange shared experience. Maybe the backrooms do exist on some kind of metaphysical plane and sometimes our unconscious minds end up there while dreaming.
@TheHattOnYouTube2 жыл бұрын
I had those dreams too!
@bilberrybird39252 жыл бұрын
Me too! I’ve had a dream with a pool many years ago and it actually felt like a past life memory or something. It didn’t look like the tiled dreampools and it was more ancient looking with stone and statues but the vibe of secret/serene/unexplainable was the same. I actually saved pictures on pinterest that reminded me of it so i can remember. I also have dreams of huge buildings with giant rooms often. Rooms symbolize the mind in dreams so I imagine we all explore our own souls in our dreams as well as being aware of some unimaginably huge and empty universal consciousness ‚building‘. Sometimes we are scared of it and the loneliness in the backrooms. Sometimes we embrace the soft ripples in our private, interconnected dreampool.
@evector12842 жыл бұрын
I've had a dream at least 3 times that I can remember of a huge bathroom. Dark blue tile on the floor walls and ceiling, toilets in random places, sinks lining areas like lockers. Sometimes there would be stalls, sometimes the toilets would be out in the open. I seem to remember pillars as well.
@benjamin16122 жыл бұрын
I was very high one night about 5 years ago and told my friend "what if they made houses that just had one foot of water in them everywhere and you waded around in it and just lived with your feet underwater all the time and you could control the temperature to make the water warm or cool" and he looked at me like I was crazy but here it is in painted form. As if straight from my THC-induced vision. So crazy this actually exists and is an entire genre of art I never knew about. Also, this was such a surreal analysis. I loved it. The insight and interpretation the narrator gives about the dreampools is itself very surreal, the way he flows from one concept to the next and conjures up such a depth of nostalgia, loneliness, meaning, life, death... reminds me of walking through my old neighborhood park as a kid in the light rain when no one was around, 1 am and not a soul awake, the entire park and woods that surrounded it felt like mine and the only source of light were the streetlights. Felt like time was frozen and I could live in those moments forever. Same kinda feelings are getting invoked in me here. This dude just earned a subscriber!
@littlecherryartist2 жыл бұрын
The fact that there are openings where light comes through means hypothetically if I found a windowed room I could just... jump out. Great video btw, idk how it came into my recommened but this is really interesting
@geschnitztekiste41112 жыл бұрын
The outside would probably be more rooms.
@gracel53482 жыл бұрын
Out side the window you see an endless sky, you look down and you can't see the ground, just more sky
@littlecherryartist2 жыл бұрын
@@gracel5348 time to become a cartoon and use toilet plungers?
@loroleibusser59932 жыл бұрын
great video, Piranesi is a favorite book of mine and the idea of wandering infinitely among ever expanding hallways that somehow permeate the light of night and day is kind of goals
@jorami48382 жыл бұрын
These videos are criminally underrated. The way you explain and define things is so articulate and brilliant. Before I watched your videos, it was hard to pinpoint exactly why I love these dream/weird core images so much. This is great! My only critique is that sometimes your voice is quieter than the sound effects in the background. Other than that, I love these videos and I'd love to hear you cover other art topics.
@Nightshade_goblin2 жыл бұрын
Thx for the feedback, I can work with that
@Caesar_Online2 жыл бұрын
Beautifully written
@SniperSnake-yz5dz2 жыл бұрын
The algorithm has graced me with being able to find such an underrated channel as yours. Some solid video essays on some of my favorite stuff (this and the weirdcore video).
@valen02762 жыл бұрын
This video is great. I really can't wait for your channel to blow up and know I've been here since 270 subscribers! Keep up the good work man, it's amazing!
@remobothic2 жыл бұрын
The pools that recurred in my dreams when I was a younger man were never new- all of my dream-pools were old. Yellowed tile on grout that had gone dark with age. These dreams were never well-lit. Many of the dreams took place at night, and were framed by my initial entrance into a sprawling, gymnasium-like compound, its exterior bare brutalist concrete against a starless, light-polluted urban sky. Others were simply staged in labyrinthine networks of tunnels, sloping passageways with two- or three-foot high staircases of the same decaying tile connecting strange, senseless hallways, basins, and rooms in one endless oubliette. Voices would ring out, always echoing faintly from another room, laughter, chatter, the sounds of winding down from exercise, but I rarely saw people- only familiar motion out of the corners of my eyes. I would hear splashing sounds, sometimes, or water jets kicking to life, or the low murmur of ventilation. Some rooms held shallow water that gave off a distinct sanitation-chemical smell, and sometimes the poolwater gave way to a locker-room atmosphere, moisture in the air, the smell of stale sweat and rust, the humid air making the tiles cling to my bare feet as I walked across them. I would roam through this decaying architecture in collapsed-time, never finding the bottom, only wandering the cramped passageways of a moist, dark, and dreaming city.
@abominablemusic2 жыл бұрын
ok, I'm watchin this again. I'd never heard of Borges, so thanks for that. I've just ordered his collected works. I fear there is a rabbit hole here worth exploring...
@Nightshade_goblin2 жыл бұрын
I got two of his collected writings. some really trippy stories that make you think. Some didn't strike me personally. Is a bit of a mixed bag. His writing is just very different from modern conventions
@YumiiOGT2 жыл бұрын
these images make me feel so weird... i feel thirsty , i feel refresh , lonely , wet , relaxed , slowed. its like i could just drown and wouldn't even suffer... like the pool heaven.
@Deezitron Жыл бұрын
Sir, good job. In my years of living, I have never seen a video as good as this. I’ve seen it around 4 times through the span of a year, and each time, i think about the last time. The nostalgia that emanates from this video makes me feel warm, like I’m in my old house watching tv. I applaud you.
@samuelabela76852 жыл бұрын
I don't get why people feel scared of these photos. They're just beautifully designed pool architecture. This is basically the future of architecture, minimalism, warm lighting and simple colouring.
@lazydroidproductions10872 жыл бұрын
Some people cannot find comfort in that deserted expansive nonsense, by reason if one or all of the descriptors that I just mentioned. And then to some funny bunch like us, they’re weirdly beautiful, even if they are discomforting, and pull you in, to me it’s almost as if they must be explored by me because they simply have not been explored, there is no trace of any desire to have people within them and I wish to wander through that rejection
@samuelabela76852 жыл бұрын
@@lazydroidproductions1087 solitude?
@lazydroidproductions10872 жыл бұрын
@@samuelabela7685 beyond solitude, complete and total alone-ness
@ohno83982 жыл бұрын
I was already uncomfortable at the point you said it wasn't too bad yet 😂though I can't look away from those strangely beautiful pictures. An absolutely wonderful video!
@LilSmoky922 жыл бұрын
When I have dreams about pools they are always indoors, but at first there are always other people and the places are usually huge but it's not like an infinite pool labyrinth. Also, dream-me always seeks out hidden spaces in these places, like a hidden room with a whirlpool in it or a empty, out-of-order looking sauna area. There is always this feeling of exploring something almost "forbidden" though, as if I am not supposed to be there.
@alittleofsomething2 жыл бұрын
I just found my new favorite thing. Thanks, random person on the Internet.
@duckles97842 жыл бұрын
When I was a kid I had a dream about playing some "Call of Duty" kind of game and the map was a giant pool with a house sized structure to the right and all surrounded by tiled walls tall enough to not let you see the outside. Inside the house thing there was a bunch of smaller pools but all empty and repeating infinitely. I spent the whole game trying to learn the controls and find other players but I was alone. In the end I just played in the pool
@geschnitztekiste41112 жыл бұрын
Damn
@generalseal69482 жыл бұрын
i once heard things like dream pools and liminal spaces described as "worlds that have forgotten humanity"
@normalguycraig2 жыл бұрын
My dreampools inspired me to write a nosleep type story based around my dreamscapes as a whole. The first chapter, Waterpark, is about the one specific dream pool that's been in my dreams 3 or 4 times now
@sora_animates_sometimes2 жыл бұрын
What do u mean by 'nosleep' ?
@normalguycraig2 жыл бұрын
@@sora_animates_sometimes the subreddit r/nosleep, it's a creative writing roleplay sub for horror stories
@sora_animates_sometimes2 жыл бұрын
@@normalguycraig oh ok
@normalguycraig2 жыл бұрын
@DevianDog i havent finished it yet homie
@johnathansmith94052 жыл бұрын
Cease self-promoter
@fabiosa_duckbert2 жыл бұрын
I can't believe you're doing a video about the dream pools! I've been completely captivated by the artwork and the silent and serene atmosphere they can capture with such intense lack of detail, what they could only accomplish without detail. While I've always been attracted to Liminal Spaces in general, there's just something about the never-ending minimalism of Dream Pools that is just so desperately enchanting. Your analysis on why it is so appealing makes so much sense, it's definitely something I could never quite put into the right words when asked " But why do you find this appealing?" but this will definitely help me in the future. I'm so glad finally someone is actually about the Dream Pools and not just putting up photos with music that never quite matches. Excellent video, I'll be sure to check out your other videos!
@88rabbit2 жыл бұрын
that video is absolutely amazing, your analyse was mesmerizing. I have been talking about those pics with a friend and our heads just blewed up. mindfuck.
@kyoshinka2 жыл бұрын
You're an amazing essay KZbinr. Your interest in all these topics is evidentally clear. And your connections to the modern world are so great. Relatable themes like loneliness and stress. Consumerist culture. And your connections to the past. You get it all in one video. Present, future, past. You DEFINETELY deserve more subs!
@gaon_free2 жыл бұрын
It gives me a “fairy fountain” vibe from Ocarina of time.. So misterious but so paceful 🤤✨
@yungwulf2 жыл бұрын
To me these pools never seemed scary or uneasy but more of something calm and peaceful where i can just wonder and not care too much about my problems and just unplug myself from my daily reality. The lighting, the color of the water and the cleanliness of the tiles just brings warmth to me, like some sort of call of the void type of feeling where you feel content with yourself for the time being. If these were real i would definitely visit them.
@alicia_mkels2 жыл бұрын
These images make me feel slightly unsettled but like I'm also curious to explore what lies in the darkness. They almost give me a sense of nostalgia like I can remember relaxing in this blue water or slowly floating about the endless rooms however, I can't picture going up or down the staircases, I can picture what it would like to go through the halls but not the stairs and im not sure why
@lazydroidproductions10872 жыл бұрын
I like structures like these. Structures who reject habitation not because they are hostile but simply because they were made without any understanding of what would make them habitable, they attempt to mimic it but there is no understanding there, simply structure and architecture, drained of reason but still designed in pursuit of it, as if maybe it was known once so long ago
@miajajajajajajajajajo2 жыл бұрын
I always liked pools with low level of water I used to visit many pools in vacations with my family during my early childhood Water was always something very comfortable for me, plus the nostalgia of pools, I feel comfiness and calm seeing this images English is not my language, so maybe I sound pretty weird, but I wanted to share what and why this pictures seems to me so pretty
@katerclickbait887Ай бұрын
I have been interested in all all things liminal, poolrooms, you name it, ever since they became an online thing but I only now stumbled upon this video essay. Just wanted to comment how incredibly good it is. Seriously amazing how other people can be this interested in something so fringe, that they come up with such a great, incredible essay.
@caedenrichter72242 жыл бұрын
Pools actually get their distinct smell from the chlorine reacting with urine so these dream pools would probably smell like nothing, adding even more emptiness.
@AliVe12342 жыл бұрын
I wish I didn't read that comment now
@amyhleigh2 жыл бұрын
It would have cost you zero dollars to not share that information
@KarpetBurn2 жыл бұрын
Why would you tell me this... I'm never swimming in a pool again
@jakezepeda12672 жыл бұрын
So thats what my pool was missing. Thanks.
@willwunsche69402 жыл бұрын
@@jakezepeda1267 on the contrary your pool not having pee is a good thing 😂
@tobilemoine96042 жыл бұрын
Great work, I personaly feel a lot of attraction to this idea of infinite pools, something absolutely serene, that you could explore for all time. There's something about the false monotomy too, the repetition that isn't, that invites us to contemplation. Like the Palace in the video game Echo.
@succboiii2 жыл бұрын
your voice is very nice to listen and you covered this very well i had no idea there was this much history and such let alone a person responsible for t h e pool photos so i really appreciate this deep dive !!
@lowdivestheanchor2 жыл бұрын
I genuinely believe you deserve an oscar or whatever it's called for writers, like a Pulitzer prize, for this video alone. Incredible
@Emietty2 жыл бұрын
Dream pools are the only things from the liminal space aesthetic that actually freak me out. Ive always had a fear of water and always had nightmares about impossible pools like these.
@0dayrepairs2 жыл бұрын
Have you ever explored a partially flooded abandoned building? It reminds me of that, but so much more pristine and well lit. I can't help but to want to want to explore, but my natural instincts are screaming at me not to.
@simona-lein94972 жыл бұрын
You are very well spoken, great video!
@darkforestwarriors2 жыл бұрын
Me and my group of friends started calling these images "pool world" and all agree that they are terrifying
@RavenBloodStudios2 жыл бұрын
as someone who also likes to overanalyze my own feelings on things, and also i am one of the people that takes great comfort in these types of liminal images, i think i can shed some light on my perspective at least. i was someone who grew up seeing these types of empty 'liminal spaces' often, as my family did quite a bit of residential and business cleaning work. for me those spaces were a comfort as a child. i was alone in places like empty ballparks while my mother and grandmother cleaned. i was safe and free to wander. empty spaces like this can provoke a relaxed feeling for me, as i never had any discomfort with empty buildings to begin with. for me as well, they do indeed cause a feeling of a comforting dream as well. the dreampools in particular share many aspects of what an enjoyable dream often will make a space look like. as when dreaming, you may not remember exact details, but you'll remember disjointed parts that make up the whole. such as with a pool, if you enjoyed being in pools by yourself, you may not think of people as part of the comfort either. you may remember the warm rays of sunshine coming through windows of an indoor pool, but you don't remember what was outside the building. you'll remember the subtle ripples that reflected the light, but possibly not the act that caused those ripples. as a child you may remember avoiding deeper parts of the pools, so your mind finds comfort in the idea of shallow clear blue water. dreams can include things that you've also never seen before, such as architecture inspired by movies, commercials, artworks, but not things you've really been to. to me all of this is what conjures a feeling of relaxed comfort from these images. they to me feel like places not meant to be interpreted in any reality, but as places our minds can create to visit freely as a rest. a place without meaning or purpose, a place simply to explore and enjoy as a visitor, and then leave when satisfied. and in a way, they almost bring a tinge of melancholy for myself, as in my current very upsetting circumstances, the images have me longing for calm quiet. for me, the vastness only brings the enjoyable idea of exploration, the possibility that there is so much to see. this is what i feel with many of these types of surreal images. i am also someone that enjoys walking down empty city areas as well, and i should say i find horror content in general to be a comfort, but that is a different topic. i think there's far more to be said and explored as to why people can connect with these images in vastly different ways, and why often these surreal landscapes and architectures can bring wonder and relaxation to some. i find there's often a huge focus on the horrific aspects of these pieces of art and the discomfort, while very little is truly explored as to why it's such a popular subject of comfort. other than just people pointing out nostalgic influences. i think it's often forgotten that many find impossible architecture to be as something to be enjoyed in the same way as impossible natural wonders. though much of it comes down to if the unknown scares you or intrigues you. also something to keep in mind, is even if an artist doesn't have a particular intent or meaning behind a piece, they still wanted to create it. they still found joy in some way with creating the piece. a good question to ask when looking at series like this is "what brings this artist joy in creating these scenes"
@snowqueen_89582 жыл бұрын
I would swim in one.....they look safe and calm and the artwork is beautiful
@Bigboisully2 жыл бұрын
When I was a kid around 5-7 i had a vivid dream of infinite pools like this but with architecture kinda like greek / renaissance era style. Gave me crazy deja vu/nostalgia seeing this video
@RetroPlus2 жыл бұрын
I've had many dreams like this featuring pools, usually a lot dirtier and more cramped or poorly lit. It's pretty interesting to see this concept as art
@theKabbage2 жыл бұрын
You playing Desert sands feel warm at night is just so damn perfect for this
@noyza21322 жыл бұрын
when you see these images for the first time, you always feel like youve seen them before, but cant recall where.
@hippiedaisy50242 жыл бұрын
Back in 2020, I had gotten seriously ill for several months of my life. we found what it is and I’m doing better now, but I’ll never forget those few months before I received treatment. I almost constantly had a fever, and I made no contact with anyone, so the only memories I had was going to the hospital so many times and these trippy fever dreams. The dreams would last so long a whole world was created in my head, with murderous family members and a cult dedicated to heating pads. But what I remembered the most was the water parks and pools. The entire time I was sick I longed for nothing but my partner (now my husband) and the pools. I don’t know where these pools are or where such a strong need to return to them were, but I would watch pool videos and waterpark videos all day long. I made my dad promise me if I got better he’d take me to the water park, and this world all took place at waterpark resorts in a strange back room manner. Now I’m obsessed with liminal spaces, backrooms, and poolrooms, because even before I knew what they were, it felt like my body was calling me back there when I’m weak, like this is my home and my safe haven
@Nightshade_goblin2 жыл бұрын
Bro you could turn the heating pad cult into a Nightvale spin-off no cap
@princegoatcheese93792 жыл бұрын
I have dreams about swimming pools on occasions. One of them was a swimming pool complex mashed together with my grandma's house. It was like a cramped, narrow house with winding hallways on the ground floor, and then a crazy pool design not unlike some of these Pike renders for the basement floor. In the dream I had to drain the pool part of the house so me and my friends could explore the pool complex further. It was a calm dream; there was no sense of dread like a shadowy figure chasing me or the pool filling up with water when I was down there. It strangely felt comfortable.
@StoryTeller7962 жыл бұрын
1 video down of these impossibly endless and paradoxical rooms, an unknown amount left to go. I really like these types of videos, probably because they remind me of my childhood before I could find brands or non-liminal world, back before the idea of having a complete world was ever introduced to me. Simpler times, those young days were.
@banebruja2 жыл бұрын
While these are definitely liminal spaces, I feel the dreampools lend themselves just as much to being superstructures. You touched on it in the video where you noted how these places are obviously artificial but seemingly impossible for any human civilization or society to create them. Jacob Geller made a pretty god video essay on them that you should check out.
@ThomasGrillo2 жыл бұрын
I have dreams of being lost in large, empty spaces, like malls, and airport terminals, as well as endlessly huge mansions. I like how the term "purgatory", and "sanctuary for the lost" are applicable to liminal spaces. This is a fascinating psychological phenomenon, indeed. The stuff of dreams, and nightmares, combined. Thanks for sharing this.
@comiccat53072 жыл бұрын
:3 u my fav video essay creator
@Hannah-zd5je2 жыл бұрын
I found this video extremely fascinating, because I have seen these pictures before - but never with context. I never realized that they were supposed to make me feel uneasy, I just wanted to go and relax in there. So thank you for the video!
@mothxcat97002 жыл бұрын
When I was a kid I had dreams about those kinds of pools it really felt wonderful
@ahtikai2 жыл бұрын
A thing about the lighting... what it reminds me of is sunday afternoons in spring: it's just a little uncomfortably hot, and it's already afternoon or early evening; my mind was already thinking that the weekend was lost, and tomorrow I'd have to go back to school where I didn't want to. I became anxious as I felt there was nothing to do, and yet how I didn't have time to do anything anymore. Looking back at it, I think there was a sense of being trapped in a loop, similar to the feeling these pictures evoke. Like the purgatory you described. Good analysis and good video
@ScutoidStudios2 жыл бұрын
The ripples could be from the water being water cycled since they're clorinated
@treetheenderhyena18802 жыл бұрын
or the wind
@ScutoidStudios2 жыл бұрын
@@treetheenderhyena1880 ...wind in the dreampools?
@treetheenderhyena18802 жыл бұрын
@@ScutoidStudios yes
@ScutoidStudios2 жыл бұрын
@@treetheenderhyena1880 fair enough, but I'd think it'd be humid and still air like in a pool room
@treetheenderhyena18802 жыл бұрын
@@ScutoidStudios If the light hypothetically did lead to the outside, it could be an oncoming breeze.
@HazeyMarina2 жыл бұрын
Im so happy these grew in popularity. When i was a kid i used to have dreams of massive water parks in the middle of impossibly deep pools and they were insane.
@violetmolloy682 жыл бұрын
Omg I’m getting flashbacks to a time I had a dream that has a pool that looked A LOT like this. There weren’t tiles, they were concrete, and I think in one of the pools someone I knew was in it.
@Llallume2 жыл бұрын
Heck! When I saw these images, I immediately thought of Piranesi, as the feeling was almost exact. So good to see you quote it.
@miajajajajajajajajajo2 жыл бұрын
¿Why the water is not still even when there is no one to move it? Well, an automatic filter to keep the water clean and " clorured " (if that's a word) could be an explanation
@TheMoulinrouge322 жыл бұрын
Just recently saw an indie “horror” game based on this concept! Forget what it was called, but it was filled with these senseless meandering pool rooms, and you’re wandering through them trying to find a way out and not go insane. It was super well executed!
@luminescentlament Жыл бұрын
what was it called?
@Amorcea2 жыл бұрын
As I was listening to the first third of your commentary, I kept being reminded of Piranesi and thinking how I might bring it up in a comment, and then you beat me to it! Fantastic book and very reminiscent of these images, I hope your video inspires others to visit the House with its infinite Tides and Halls. I'd love to see a liminal space artist tackle a rendition of it. I just remembered: as a kid, sometimes I'd lie upside-down and imagine what it would be like to live on the ceiling (with all the weird slopes and inconvenient angles of the eaves of the old house that had been remodeled so many times in 100+ years). These images evoke for me a similar feeling of a blank- almost sterile- space that is eminently manmade, yet inaccessible to humans. Nostalgia. :)
@loganmiller78272 жыл бұрын
I would love to go to wherever these pictures were taken. Assuming the space is lit like in these pictures, I think I'd find it enjoyable in a weird way. I don't really know why though
@ambientsentient2 жыл бұрын
Rewinding this video for the umpteenth time because of how dream-like the narration is >>>
@ARandomWolfApproaches2 жыл бұрын
I'd love a pool like this. idc if there's demons in the shadows of the pool or somthin, I just wanna swim there.
@nodogsonsunday2 жыл бұрын
feels really good to find another yt channel making quality content
@anem0ia2 жыл бұрын
I need a dreampool themed playlist that would be so cool. Especially if the songs had like sounds of dripping water! The first song that comes to mind is gooey by glass animals. Even better if the playlist itself is edited to sound echoey/underwater ohmygosh someone make this please
@hahaha5742 жыл бұрын
This is just the beginning. Some songs may work and some songs might not. I'll add on to it forever.
@dylankirby5542 жыл бұрын
At first when I saw this topic, I really didn't thought much about it more to the sort of relaxing nature of pure white and the lights coming out of the "windows". It was like a nice place to chill out and swim alone. It was until you mentioned the emptiness of the rooms (even the possibilty of someone of something being there) and the infinity of them when I realised it can also work as a psychological horror theme, being trapped there forever. But anyway, I think the artist did an amazing job with this art, great video there :)
@martinthegamer90402 жыл бұрын
Not gonna lie, The Dreampools don't give me a sense of dread. Some of them with the dark tunnels do creep me out a little, but still not really a sense of dread. Turqoise and clear waters, around a meter deep. No sounds around you. Just imagine being able to swim there, all alone, with sunlight/warm lights around you. For me, this litterally looks like the perfect place to relax, especially if you turn on some relaxing soundtracks. If i ever become a millionaire and can build a private pool, i am making one in the style of The Dreampools.
@keithjohnsonHelios2 жыл бұрын
This was incredible, paced, poignant and very well read. Thank you
@xymoth_2 жыл бұрын
holy SHISH I dreamt about one of those, with a gecko on the wall THEY REALLY ARE DREAMPOOLS
@saramurtas1826 Жыл бұрын
These images weirdly remind me of brief moments in time. Strange far away memories of a short second at a pool party as a kid, chilling in an empty corner looking at no one in front of me.. no one but water, an empty tiled wall and the smell of chlorine. It's disturbing to think of yourself in an empty pool. It feels scary; the water, the hard and cold surfaces. These images make you want to keep looking in search of someone, even something that makes you feel a bit less alone. Thank you for this video, I found it really impactful, something about all of this definitely resonates
@thomassontag42702 жыл бұрын
This takes me back to when I got high on mushrooms and listened to Alan Parsons Project for the first time (I was going album by album in chronological order). When listening to "Genesis Ch.1 V.32" I felt an illusion (which I did recognize as such at the time) where I was absolutely alone in the universe, sitting in a planet full of acqueducts in a vaguely Greek style. There were pointless columns stacked atop equally pointless arches, all in plain and pure white and with barely any ornaments. All I could see were nonsensical structures rising above the bright blue ocean, and it was warm with a slight breeze. I was sure there had never been any life in this world nor would there ever be, and I have never felt so relaxed.
@Nightshade_goblin2 жыл бұрын
Sounds dope
@saladvibes2 жыл бұрын
I'm so glad you mentioned Piranesi! The book was literally the first thing I thought about when I started seeing images of the dreampools.
@kyoshinka2 жыл бұрын
I had a dream like this before. It was like a pool that had a hole in it, so I went thru it. There were tons of pools in there which lead to rooms of more giant pools. Something about pools reaches our deep subconscious. Super interesting. (Edit) I was gonna say it looked like the hell in Dante's inferno! It was like a bunch of different pools which spiralled down. Man, this is getting so interesting (Edit 2) Alright I'm subbed
@camayrum60402 жыл бұрын
Thank you. I am addicted to this aesthetic and before you your video I didn't know why
@atomidragon2 жыл бұрын
Honestly would be really cool if some company/business tried to somewhat replicate this in real life.
@caitlinwebster66132 жыл бұрын
i'm a big fan of liminal pool pictures but the longer i watched the images cycle through, the more unnerved i got. really great video im def gonna be checking out ur other stuff
@xXMaoKittyCatXx2 жыл бұрын
I would've loved to swim in those types of pools, looking at these images make me feel at peace
@SpookeyGael2 жыл бұрын
As someone who grew up around a lot of beaches and artificial pools these images are intensely relaxing to me, they feel like somewhere I could just swim and lounge in the water for hours.
@moonmicrowave98762 жыл бұрын
Dream pools lowkey scare me they look incomplete and feels like there’s no way out of them
@StalwartPikeman2 жыл бұрын
I'd never heard about Dreampools until this video (which I got to from your one on Sovietwave). In Phoenix, Arizona there are a number of stormwater drainage canals, which are built to carry flooding from heavy monsoon rain. Because Phoenix is incredibly dry, they are usually completely empty, or have just a tiny trickle of water down the middle. As a child, I rode a bicycle along the sides of these canals (there were paved bike and walking paths). I long wanted to explore the canals from inside them, but never had the guts to violate the NO TRESPASSING signs. I had a recurring series of dreams across several years which involved entering the canals, traveling along them, and finding increasingly fantastical structures and tunnels, all made from the same bleak tan concrete as the real canals. As I've been a lucid dreamer since even before that age, I knew I was in a dream and thus had no fear of the unknown, merely enjoying the exploration and adventure. When I saw these images, I felt nostalgia for those dreams of impossible canals, and I felt welcoming and a certain at-home feeling from them. It makes me wonder if the artist had similar dreams, but about pools. Now I shall sleep, and attempt to dream of the Dreampools.