Baylee Luttrell

Jolie Siegel

Luttrell is a graphic designer from Tullahoma, TN who has done work in editorial design, branding, and illustration. This poster design was inspired by their experience as a mandated reporter while working with children at a daycare facility. Their goal with this poster is to advocate for child abuse victims. Luttrell states that he used simple geometric shapes in this poster in order to prevent it from becoming “too dark”. I thought that is was an interesting choice as the message the poster is conveying is already a dark theme. Additionally, the use of geometric shapes in a way allows for the viewer to decide who the abuser is, creating a sense of relatability to those whose abuser may not be their parent. The non-gender specific illustration allows people to come to their own conclusions about who the abuser may be, as a parent is not always the abuser in a child abuse situation. Luttrell does a great job conveying the message with the geometric rigidity as sharp figures don’t often represent comfort and safety. In this piece Luttrell includes a tag line “help defeat the monster” as well as including a statistic along the bottom with a call to action


Luttrell has also done an editorial inspired by the movie “Hidden Figures”. This piece was created with age in mind and they chose to use a monochrome palette to convey this message. The photos in this piece were carefully edited keeping the theme of old age in mind.

More of Luttrell’s work can be found on their website portfolio at https://bayleeluttrell.design/work

Shepard Fairey

Above
Shepard Fairey, gun violence awareness

Shepard Fairey is an American contemporary artist and activist who is very open about his social and political opinion with his work. He is often seen creating and donating artwork to promote and create awareness of social issues such as women’s rights, gun regulation, human rights, and many more.

Fairey’s work combines elements of graffiti, pop art, business art, and Marxist theory. His work has been internationally shown in many galleries and museums

image:https://admin.itsnicethat.com/images/VQwG_rKosc5-TIIHih5Idktc8Rw=/40616/format-webp%7Cwidth-2880/5ab4ccea7fa44c83c7000604.jpg

Schneider Graphics For Change

Lorraine Schneider

Ivanah Alexandre
Primer (1966)

Lorraine Schneider (1925-1972) was an American Anti War Artist, a printmaker. She made her most iconic poster Primer for the Another Mother for Peace campaign. The poster states “war is not healthy for children and other living things” and it is in response to the Vietnam War that was happening in the 1960s. I think one of the brilliant things about this poster is how it childish it looks. It looks like a child grabbed a crayon and doodled a flower and their thoughts. I feel that makes the storytelling component more compelling because it makes it as if the POV is the child which appeals to Pathos and can make the viewer more empathetic. If it were super sophisticated and complex it wouldn’t tell the same story and it would be less powerful. It’s also nice how the stem of the flowers break up this visual text and the flower’s “head” follows the rule of thirds. The muted yellow is the perfect color to use. Yellow usually portrays brightness, happiness, positivity, and life. Yellow is childish almost in the way of how positive it is. The fact that it is muted adds the storytelling because it darkens all of those adjectives I listed before. The fact that the flower is black tells a story as well.

Lorraine unfortunately had a short career however her work still lives on. She had four children of her own so this piece in particular is really art from the heart. Primer is still receiving global recognition and is an iconic political activism piece of art.

Man will learn to resolve his inevitable difference through nonmilitary alternatives. But it is up to us, the artists. . . to prepare the emotional soil for the last step out of the cave.” -Lorraine Schneider

Image: Schneider, 1996, Primer, print. Created for the Another Mother for Peace campaign.

Luba Lukova

New York image-maker Luba Lukova is internationally known for her work in graphics for social change. Her work uses an economy of color and clean graphics to create visual metaphors that communicate powerful messages that take seconds to grasp, but resonates deeply.

Her collection of posters, Social Justice 2008, continues to be exhibited world-wide. Her work is part of the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art in New York City as well as many other museums. She regularly is commissioned to do work for such clients as the New York Times, Sony Music, and Harvard University. Lukova was born in Bulgaria and currently lives in Long Island City.

Visit Luba Lukova’s website.

Image: Lukova, 2009, They Take Our Jobs, silkscreen. Created for an exhibition organized by the Hellenic Migration Policy Institute.