In A City, or Another, fifty photographs of contemporary architecture are set into shallow wood boxes that hang on the wall. The images can be displayed in a variety of configurations; from simple arrangements or merging into more complex configurations. There is no single, fixed layout.
Cities have begun to look like each other; the photographs could have been taken anywhere. The buildings are unremarkable and standardized, reflecting the sameness of cities and lending to a uniformity that is both familiar and anonymous.