The pieces on show range from 19th century anti-slavery broadsides to the striking, colourful Atelier Populaire posters (or ‘affiches’) that were rapidly printed during the 1968 civil uprisings in France. Protest proves to be an apposite tool for drawing together some of the biggest political and social histories of the past two centuries. The show serves in part to position those actions and that particular swathe of protest within a historical and future-facing lineage that uncovers the intersection of anger and image-making. Munro and Coles began working together on Strikethrough in the wake of the 2020 Black Lives Matter protests, aiming to “showcase typographic anger and agency as it is seen in the streets, on the printed page, and even on the bodies of demonstrators”. The show is divided into five sections, each based on a different way to voice dissent: Vote!, Resist!, Love!, Teach!, and Strike! These categories aim to “chart a typographic chant of resistance”, as the curators put it. Unknown designer, Social Justice in Mexico (Justicia Social en Mexico) letterpress book cover, 1935 Unknown designer, Feminist Majority Foundation reissue of the 1979 protest sign for the ERA Yes movement, 2021 The exhibits draw from existing and newly acquired pieces in Letterform Archives’ own collections. Polymode partner Silas Munro and Letterform Archive associate curator and editorial director Stephen Coles helmed the curation for Strikethrough, bringing together more than 100 objects including placards, badges, posters, signs, T-shirts, and other ephemera spanning from the 1800s to the present day. This is only the second show to be held at Letterform Archive’s permanent SF space, and it has been put together in collaboration with graphic design studio Polymode, which has previously worked with clients including Cooper Hewitt Design Museum, MoMA, the New Museum, Phaidon Press, and Pulitzer Arts Foundation. When a banner needs to be made in a matter of hours, it’s about maximum impact - maybe through humour, bright colours, hard-hitting text, or sheer scale - it’s not about perfect kerning and painstakingly crafting three sets of fun alternates. The ‘craft’ of protest is interesting when you look at it through a typographical lens: typographers have a certain reputation for order, detail-obsession, and perfectionism – traits that seem pretty at odds with the actions of demonstrating. Atelier Populaire, Yes to the Revolution! (Oui à la révolution!), 1968 Martin Venezky for Appetite Engineers, Art for Aids poster, 2001 The show, titled Strikethrough: Typographic Messages of Protest, merges politics and mark making, demonstrating the power of letterforms to communicate, mobilise, and make change. Protest particularly levels the playing field of typography, something that’s celebrated in a forthcoming exhibition at the Letterform Archive in San Francisco. The history of protest is hard to document: the idea of a singular, ego-tinged ‘artist’ or ‘creator’ becomes almost redundant if a graphic is to work towards a collective fight or speak up for the oppressed, after all. It’s rare that it isn’t a fitting time for an exhibition about the power of protest, but with the recent overturning of Roe v Wade in the US (making abortion effectively illegal in many states), that sense of urgency, anger, and grassroots uprising feels particularly pertinent.
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