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Friday, October 31, 2008
Persuasive Paper
Posted by steve


How effective are posters in altering people's perceptions? Are they only worth the paper they're printed on or are they truly persuasive papers? The debate rages at the exhibition Signs of Change: Social Movement Cultures 1960s to Now at Exit Art in New York, where hundreds of posters, photographs, moving images, audio clips, and ephemera document more than 40 years of activism, political protest, and campaigns for social justice. Many of them have indeed altered perception and triggered action. Curated by Dara Greenwald and Josh MacPhee and organized thematically, the current show presents issues from Civil Rights and Black Power in the United States to democracy in China to anti-apartheid in Africa to environmental activism and women's rights internationally. "The exhibition also explores the development of powerful counter-cultures that evolve beyond traditional politics and create distinct aesthetics, lifestyles, and social organization," say its organizers. Exit Art exhibitions are famous for presenting a critical mass of unique artifacts and this one is no exception.





Design | Politics | Posters
10/31/2008 5:59:44 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)    Comments [1]
10/31/2008 1:22:45 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
I think posters have a huge pull on people's perspective of how they look at causes. Take the Nazi propaganda posters of the early 1900's and the imagery they used in those. They looked all powerful. If you were a poor little German boy and saw that poster of course you would want to be like the all powerful "fist" of the German.
Also, as a designer I believe that to believe that a powerful image is the best way to get the message out.
Derek
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