Doesn't Exist is a magazine whose name is its philosophy. The publication operates in the space between presence and absence, questioning the nature of what it means to exist as a print object in a digital world. Each issue interrogates ideas of visibility, impermanence, and the paradox of a physical magazine that declares its own non-existence on the cover.
The editorial approach is conceptual and playful, using the format of a magazine to explore ideas about identity, perception, and the relationship between objects and the meaning we assign to them. The photography and design are integral to the concept — not illustrations of ideas but embodiments of them.
In a media landscape saturated with content that insists on its own importance, Doesn't Exist makes the opposite move — and in doing so, becomes one of the most memorable publications you will encounter. The name is a paradox. So is the magazine. Both are entirely deliberate.