Author: Mut zur Wut

  • MEMEME

    MEMEME

    Leonie Brandmüller

    Being selfcentered harbours the risk of not being able to understand other viewpoints and positions.

  • HELP ME

    HELP ME

    Rongxiang Lin

    The poster deeply digs and creatively from the phenomenon of life, using graphics to show the last scene of people falling into the water asking for help, while the people close at hand are taking photos as a rubberneck, thus criticizing this strange phenomenon of “indifference”, hoping to wake up the people’s sense of social responsibility, and make it a social atmosphere to be brave and good.

  • PROTECT THE FOREST

    PROTECT THE FOREST

    Yumeng Yan

    Over cutting of human beings will eventually lead to the disappearance of forests.

  • BOMBING IS NOT JUSTICE!

    BOMBING IS NOT JUSTICE!

    Yao Cui

    The application of military drones has greatly reduced the risks and costs of bombing. For certain political authorities and interests, the new technology provides the convenience to harm innocent civilians in the name of justice. Facing violent tactics like bombing, the figure of the picture is howling from the bottom of his heart: NO!

  • ALL GONE

    ALL GONE

    Jie-Fei Yang

    This poster is commenting on the adverse consequences of overfishing and overhunting for human gratification, which often results in the critical endangerment of certain species and puts biodiversity in grave danger.

  • PRIVACY?

    PRIVACY?

    Elina Pyrohova

    Flourishing of social media has led to the global shift in how we perceive privacy. Being normalized in everyday life, constant violations of confidentiality make us wonder where is the boundary which separates private from public. In this whirlpool of doubt and caution, everywhere and all the time we feel persistent presence of someone else. Someone who is watching.

  • GRAVITY

    GRAVITY

    Weiqiang Tang

    The poster design is inspired by “gravity”. The bullets fired by terrorists fly around the earth under the action of gravity, and finally hit themselves, so as to reflect the war starting from evil, and finally It’s still me who eats back.

  • EVERY MUSEUM, EVERYWHERE, ALL THE TIME.

    EVERY MUSEUM, EVERYWHERE, ALL THE TIME.

    Henning Ramke

    If one visits an art exhibition in 2023, one gets the impression that the majority of visitors spend their time creating a reproduction of the work with their smartphone or camera.
    According to a study, visitors spend an average of 27 seconds in front of a work of art. But seeing a work of art, understanding, reflecting on it, and appreciating all the sensory perceptions that only the immediate experience can provide takes time.

    Take your Time.
    It’s worth it.

  • STRUGGLE

    STRUGGLE

    Luka Prstojević

    A good idea is hard to come by, and to communicate it visually is even harder. Ideas always will always create effects, they have consequences. They can shape the world, mold the planet and leave a trace … like they did on my forehead.

  • MAMA

    MAMA

    Nina Hanzelic

    Let’s face it: between part-time, care work and housework, mothers actually work full-time. No one cares if they have the tools, the time or a team to support them. Even the day off is used to finally organize medical appointments, buy a birthday present for the kids’ party on Saturday, look for bigger shoes, put away the clean laundry pile and get a new sunscreen.

    Actually, mommy is just an acronym for do. Unnoticed and unpaid, of course.