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Recent Posts

16 November, 2019

Play Press: International “Tolerance” Poster Exhibition in Serbia

Mark’s “Tolerance” poster displayed in the lobby of the Yugoslav Drama Theatre in Belgrade.

On November 16th, the International day of Tolerance, the “Tolerance Poster Show” opened at the Pride Info Center in Belgrade, Serbia. Simultaneously, the “Tolerance Poster Show” was shown in the lobby of the Yugoslav Drama Theatre in Belgrade.

See our “Tolerance” posters and others under Design is Play Studio Posters.

+ SHARE Tags Play : Press/Symbols/Agitprop

11 November, 2019

Our New Poster Shop, Paper Sirens

We invite you to visit Paper Sirens, our new poster shop!

We will be adding more posters, new and old, over the coming weeks and months. Many of our posters are included in archives and museum collections around the world—which we believe is an indication of both their quality and cultural significance.

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7 November, 2019

Play Press: The “Design of Dissent” Poster Exhibition in Mexico

Our 2016 poster Trump 24K Gold-Plated poster is featured in Mirko Ilić’s “Design of Dissent” poster exhibition, now on display at Casa del Lago in Mexico City. The show was organized by Centro University and Casa del Lago.

See our Trump 24K Gold-Plated poster and others under Design is Play Studio Posters.

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15 October, 2019

Play Press: “Gombrowicz” (FOX)

In 2019 we were commissioned by the Poster Museum at Wilanów in Warsaw to design two posters about the legacy of the Polish writer Witold Gombrowicz as part of an international juried competition. 2019 was the fiftieth anniversary of Gombrowicz’s death.

The central motif of an eye floating against two planes is a response to Witold Gombrowicz’s observation that he always found himself “between things.” The eye is disembodied—“amputated”—the better to see and thus to “cut a path through Unreality to Reality.” Gombrowicz’s understanding of Reality includes that which is unattractive or even repugnant, a Reality suggested in the poster by the presence of a fly.

Gombrowicz describes himself as a fly in a farmyard in “A Kind of Testament.” Like a fly, Gombrowicz is drawn to the degenerate; to “subterranean” tendencies. He is also an irritant and pest. He is a provocateur.

The disembodied eye is Gombrowicz—as is the fly. Conscious of his artifice, Gombrowicz observes himself observing himself. (The poster depicts a kind of mirror.) Furthering this idea, the phrase “pół-wieczny” is also mirrored, reading from right to left.

Because of its size, prominence, and ease of legibility, one reads “Gombrowicz” before one decodes “pół-wieczny.” The act of reading left to right and then right to left creates a visual loop, a continuous circling that references the concept of “semi-eternal,” the ancillary meaning of “semicentenary” in Polish.

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15 October, 2019

Play Press: “Gombrowicz” (WANG)

We were commissioned by the Poster Museum at Wilanów in Warsaw to design two posters about the legacy of the Polish writer Witold Gombrowicz as part of an international juried competition. 2019 was the fiftieth anniversary of Gombrowicz’s death.

The poster features a portrait of the writer Witold Gombrowicz rendered in squares. Like words joined together to form first a sentence, then a paragraph, then a story, so too do individual pixels coalesce to form an image of Gombrowicz. (“I create myself through my work,” he writes in “A Kind of Testament.”) The portrait’s left edge is purposely unresolved and imperfect. “My life is so… so… haphazard… unfinished… fluid… inadequate…”

Symmetrical and equilateral, the square epitomizes stability, immutability, and thus permanence. (“Pół-wieczny” suggests the idea of “semi-eternal.”) But while the square signals resistance to change, the pixel presents a paradoxical twist. Even as the form of the square pixel remains constant, it nonetheless facilitates the endless mutation of digital imagery—and thus of impermanence. (A contradiction that Gombrowicz would no doubt find amusing.)

The three nested squares that reveal the raw surface of the unprinted chipboard is a Japanese symbol known as a masu. (A masu is a square wooden box used for measuring rice in the 8th century when rice was a form of currency.) Masu is a homophone of the Japanese word for “increase,” and so these three concentric squares are understood as a sign of growth and abundance. We use them on the poster to symbolize the growth of Gombrowicz’s vision and influence in Poland as well as throughout the world.

“Gombrowicz” and “pół-wieczny” are printed in copper and silver, respectively. These metallic inks reinforce the theme of “semi-eternal” as precious metals are associated with permanence and incorruptibility.

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