Jean-Benoit Levy's posters
Those Swiss Posters created at Studio AND since 1988. Produced mostly on the Swiss "Weltformat" size ( 128 x 90.5 cm ) ~ ( 50 x 35.5 Inches ) they have been printed in Silkscreen in small quantity and are available to purchase directly at the source: the designer.
67 Pins
·4mo
Celebrating the 50th anniversary of the first step on the moon
With the goal to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 11 mission, Jean-Benoit Levy contacted Martin Venezky for the pictorial part of the poster he was planning. Levy who long observed the poetic photo-compositions of Venezky, who holds an MFA in Design from Cranbrook Academy of Art, was dreaming of working with one of his compositions for a long time. Two different graphical approaches intertwined into a unique collaboration for this self-produced Swiss poster-size work.
The fight on the global pandemic has possibly taken a terrible toll on human rights and individual freedom in an unprecedented way. By combining two iconographic imagery : a censor bar with a bar code masking a person's eyes and mouth, the poster expresses the anonymity of any standardized administrative decisions toward each individual.
Teach Love
Like a ongoing sound that is transforming, this composition mutate itself from the straight cold dark edges of the rectangular format to become a circular glowing element in its center. Morphing slowly from one shape to the other with small variations, this composition symbolize the surrounding changes in the natural order that is permanently transforming us.
Categories:Posters
“Earth provides enough to satisfy every man's needs, but not every man's greed.” This quote from Gandhi was the starting point of making this self produced poster as a statement about what is happening today with our individual, familial, communital and global environment in matter of ecological, social and economical behavior.
More Money = Less Love
Jean-Benoit Levy : Poster against weapons. Even if we don't like them and don't buy them, weapons enter our private life trough the culture such as movies or general imagery. They come naturally in the hands of our children trough toys and stories. Their presence is exciting, brings fear or respect, as well as the illusion of safety. The silhouette of a human surended by guns that are building a camouflage pattern expresses how powerless we are as individuals, facing the weapon industry.
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