The Eternal Delivery stages an accident: a fallen delivery bag from which a Bible and a cascade of golden sequins spill into space. This collision exposes two temporal regimes shaping contemporaneity: the algorithmic immediacy of accelerated consumption and the promise of eternity embodied in religion.
The delivery device, emblem of neoliberal acceleration, here collapses into ruin, relic of the obsolescence of an economy founded on instant gratification. Opposite to it, the Bible emerges as a paradigm of transcendence, always deferred toward a horizon that never arrives. Both logics reveal themselves as economies of promise, administering desire through distinct forms of control.
The flow of golden sequins introduces the festive and the banal, but also the precious and the sacred degraded into ornament. The accident opens a critical and poetic fold where the ephemeral confronts the absolute, showing how the instantaneous exhausts itself in acceleration while the eternal deteriorates into symbolic commodity.