Supermundane: political posters have the power to reach beyond our bubble

Date
15 May 2017
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Supermundane

In the lead-up to the UK’s general election, graphic designer Rob Lowe, aka Supermundane, has released a series of posters that are free to download, which he is encouraging us to print out and “put where people can see them”. Here, he writes about why he’s returned to posters and how they might have the power to break us out of our bubbles.

I decided to make these posters while on the Eurostar heading, ironically, for Brussels. I had been reading interviews with the French activist/communist design group Grapus and it inspired me to return to an idea I had a few years ago. I wanted to design posters for the last general election but the mood was very different back then – it was only a couple of years ago that nobody really spoke about politics – and I felt that printed posters were maybe a nostalgic indulgence in the age of social media.

I thought that my Facebook/Instagram/whatever would reach far more people than a poster could and speak more directly to a youth that needed to begin engaging with politics. Now we know that all we were doing was talking to people who already thought the same as us. Johan Kugelberg (curator of the May 1968 poster show in 2008) said in relation to posters in a interview with Creative Review: “There seems to be evidence here of the making of an ultra-potent antidote to the extremely scary fragmented, cubicled and computer-screened hyper-individualism of today. Your blog won’t change anything. Your Facebook potentially could, but only if you add to it by meeting and communicating face-to-face with people from walks of life very different to yours.”

I grew up in the 70s and 80s with the looming threat of nuclear war and TV shows like Spitting Image and The Young Ones that brought politics to the youth. I was interested in the cartoons of people like Martin Rowson and Gerald Scafe and I would copy the grotesque drawings of Maggie Thatcher and other politicians. Then the 90s came along and the rise of individualism and people lost interest in organised politics. Apart from a few spikes (the anti war march of 2003 and the riots of 2011 for example) politically this country has been gripped by a mass apathy that we have only recently been shaken out of.

I have been thinking for a while now that a return of the printed poster in public common spaces could be a way of breaking out of the social bubbles we all find ourselves in. The posters themselves are simple, using my own typeface, Mundane Condensed, black and white for easy copying and free for anyone to download. Most of the slogans are mine (it was a gift when I wrote out ‘Vote Conservative to end the NHS’ and it made a cross) but one of the posters uses Morrissey lyrics. My feeling is they work best in multiple, a whole wall of the eyes would be very effective.

These are not aimed at older Tory voters but younger people, something to get people thinking and talking. If anyone doesn’t like them or think they are ineffective then that’s fine; to that I would say make your own and get your own message out there. Talking about these posters isn’t the point, getting the Tories out is.

Download the posters here.

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Supermundane

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Supermundane

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Supermundane

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Supermundane

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