“These political posters should be looked at as tools,” says Laetitia Wolff, curator for Get Out The Vote. “Design has a real power to change behaviour.”
Get Out The Vote is the U.S. election poster campaign from the AIGA, North America's professional association for design. Through an online gallery, the campaign which happens every four years to coincide with a presidential election uses the power of design and illustration to “activate” the public and get them interested in American politics, says Wolff.
While the campaign hopes to encourage engagement, it also aims to be non-partisan, and so the posters do not advocate for either the Republicans or Democrats, but simply inspire people to use their vote.
“Voting demonstrates that you belong to a nation, not just a party,” says Wolff. “Though we would still love to see the likes of Bernie Sanders, Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump use the posters as part of the campaigns.”
The AIGA's Get Out The Vote campaign was first launched in 2004, and looks to both high and low profile designers to create posters that can be included within its online gallery.
The initiative receives submissions from the likes of Milton Glaser and Paula Scher, and a number of other designers, the only specification being that they need to be a member of the AIGA to submit a design. The AIGA has 26,000 members across the continent, spread across 70 different hubs in the U.S.
Alongside an online gallery of all submissions, which at the moment totals around 150 for this year, there are also exhibitions held in conjunction with the Republican National Convention and the Democratic National Convention, which are both taking place later this month. An exhibition of select design works is also held at the AIGA Design Conference in Las Vegas in October.
While the online gallery includes all submissions, the exhibitions are more selective, including a curated selection of 45 posters to correlate with this year being the 45th presidential election from “design influencers” and a hand-picked selection of others.
Wolff says the campaign aims to make issues that affect everybody more “visible, legible and accessible”, through using “beautiful imagery” to interest and activate people into starting a conversation about politics.
“Good design makes choices clear,” says Wolff. “Designers have an important responsibility to use their work as a communication tool and to engage citizens including themselves.”
The campaign has also partnered with the League of Women Voters this year, a non-partisan organisation which aims to mobilise and educate the public, both male and female, about voting. Together, the organisations host events throughout the year to encourage more people to vote by engaging them with design.
All AIGA members can contribute posters through the Get Out The Vote submission form until 8 November, the date of the U.S. presidential election.
The organisation also encourages site viewers to download and share the posters, using hashtags #AIGAvote and #GetOutTheVote, with the hope of activating more voters.
These are some of the posters submitted so far this year:
The post AIGA Get Out The Vote poster campaign looks to activate U.S. voters appeared first on Design Week.
Further doubt cast on future of proposed bridge after preparatory work halted over fears about public funding
The future of London's proposed garden bridge has been called into further question after the city's new mayor, Sadiq Khan, halted preparatory work on the structure over fears this could involve more public money being spent.
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Graduate students supported by the National Science Foundation helped helm two separate exoplanet discoveries that could expand researchers' understanding of how planets form and orbit stars. K2-33b, shown in this illustration, is one of the youngest exoplanets detected to date and makes a complete orbit around its star in about five days. These two characteristics combined provide exciting new directions for planet-formation theories. K2-33b could have formed on a farther out orbit and quickly migrated inward. Alternatively, it could have formed in situ, or in place.
Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/R. Hurt
ben.beedell1 posted a photo:
I took this shot yesterday evening just as the sun was going down ?☀️
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Froma Harrop: Surprise: U.S. factory jobs growing Omaha World-Herald What's happening is automation. Robots enable manufacturers to make lots of stuff with relatively few workers. The ability to do the job with far fewer humans goes far in canceling the advantage of low-wage countries. (Lower U.S. energy costs have ... and more » |
MarkLives.com | The Adtagonist: You're fired — love the future x MarkLives.com From the advertising executive to the humble bartender, everything we do is either influenced by or fully vested in technology and its consistent 'tomorrowness'. Hold up, did you say bartender? Here's the thing. There's even a robot programmed to pour ... |
Merced Sun-Star | Merced reacts with sadness, anger, fear to violence in Dallas Merced Sun-Star Authorities initially said there were three suspects in custody and a fourth killed by a robot-delivered bomb in a parking garage after a long standoff. However, on Friday afternoon, ... Back in Texas, Flowers worried for the future. “I'm just hoping ... Micah X Johnson, the Dallas police shooter, was taken out with a robot delivered bombBlasting News all 9,015 news articles » |
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When cells die, whether through apoptosis or necrosis, the DNA and other molecules found in those cells don't just disappear. They wind up in the bloodstream, where degraded bits and pieces can be extracted. This cell-free DNA (cfDNA) is degraded due to its exposure to enzymes in the blood but is nonetheless a powerful monitoring tool in cancer, pregnancy and organ transplantation. One fairly recent breakthrough is prenatal testing for conditions such as Down syndrome, as fragments of fetal cfDNA can be detected in a mother's bloodstream. Now, borrowing a genomics technique used in the study of the ancient past, a Cornell graduate student has come up with a diagnostic tool that can open a window into a transplant recipient's immediate future through the analysis of cfDNA.
Image credit: Sarah Nickerson/Biomedical Engineering
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This is an installment in Tongva Park in Santa Monica, California. These weather vanes move with the wind. One of the photos from the Flickr LA Photowalk.
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ShutterJack posted a photo:
Had a great time at the photowalk today. Discovered this under the Santa Monica Pier. The light shone down through the slats in the pier.
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SETI (the Search for Extra Terrestrial Intelligence) is both exciting and disappointing: exciting because of peoples' eternal wish for someone else to be out there; and disappointing because life proves so hard to find.…
Watendlath Tarn, Borrowdale At my approach the soot-black, long-necked bird opens its hook-tipped bill, and utters a harsh croak
Watendlath Tarn shines like a burnished mirror. Perfect reflections of the surrounding hills and a Chelsea blue sky are disrupted only by the occasional splash of mallards and greylag geese and jumping trout. Black buzzer flies (chironomids or non-biting midges) on the surface are hatching from the tarn bed.
I think of Judith Paris, the historical novel by Hugh Walpole, which was a bestseller in the 1930s, though little read these days. It is partly set in revolutionary Paris and partly in Watendlath, with tales of passion and murder played out against vivid descriptions of the Cumbrian countryside.
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The much-anticipated Season 2 premiere of Mr. Robot made a surprise appearance on Sunday in the most unlikely place: Twitter.
With pretty much no warning at all, the video appeared on the show's official Twitter page Sunday evening. And this isn't a short preview or outtake, this is the entire first episode.
"We have released the #mrrobot season_2.0 Premiere early, but it won't be here long," reads the Twitter message accompanying the video. "Watch while you can, friends."
The original premiere date was promoted as July 13, but now that date has been reserved for the second part of Sunday's 44-minute premiere, which ends with the word "intermission." Read more...
Merced Sun-Star | Merced reacts with sadness, anger, fear to violence in Dallas Merced Sun-Star Authorities initially said there were three suspects in custody and a fourth killed by a robot-delivered bomb in a parking garage after a long standoff. However, on Friday afternoon, ... Back in Texas, Flowers worried for the future. “I'm just hoping ... Micah X Johnson, the Dallas police shooter, was taken out with a robot delivered bombBlasting News all 8,357 news articles » |