Video: "What the hell?" (WTF) - minimalist poster series
2024 Author: Richard Flannagan | [email protected]. Last modified: 2023-12-15 23:55
Each of us has incidents in life. When things don't go as planned. And at this moment, willingly or unwillingly, the cherished three words flies from our language: "What the hell?" These are the moments of the series of minimalist posters "WTF" ("What The Fuck?"), Created by the Argentine design studio Minga.
Life, no matter how trite it may sound, is an unpredictable thing. No wonder there is a saying: "If you want to make God laugh, tell him about your plans." Because very often our plans are thwarted both for reasons that depend on us and for reasons beyond our control.
The second cases are especially offensive when force majeure or a third party comes into force. And at such moments you want to swear dirty. Shout, for example, the universal international phrase What The Fuck ?, which is so often pronounced around the world that it has earned its own commonly understood acronym - WTF.
The series of posters with this name, WTF, was created by the Minga studio from Buenos Aires. Minimalism in graphics has been very popular lately. Think of the minimalist pasta book by Caz Hildebrand, minimalist posters of cult feature films and TV series by Pedro Vidotto and Albert Exergian, or the minimalist logos of famous superheroes from Screen Rant.
So in the work of designers from the Minga studio, one should also not look for pretentious hyperrealism, where every hair on the hero's head is carefully traced. No, everything is extremely simple here, but it is clear, original and funny.
The WTF series of posters from the Minga studio includes a dozen works depicting a variety of incidents. Moreover, they happen not only with people, but even with animals and superheroes. An excellent illustration of the fact that no one is immune from troubles that do not depend on his will.
An excellent illustration of the creative thinking and design talent of the Minga studio staff.
Recommended:
Fine Arts Lessons: An Inspirational English Language Poster Series from Britanico
The Britanico English Institute has dedicated its new series of posters to the problem of mastering correct pronunciation. With restrained English humor and beautiful visuals, these works make it clear how improper articulation can turn singer Cher into a chair and ash into a donkey
Funny ad for cockroach gel that turns hell into hell
If all dogs go to heaven, then less cuddly pets burn in hell, according to a creative ad. And a good cockroach gel delivers them to the warmest regions. Through the efforts of a hellish mixture, our smallest brothers make the devils themselves rage and swear, diverting the attention of evil spirits from people
3D portraits of Adam Neate. Collage series "The flock series"
Despite the fact that Adam Neate, a British artist, is considered primarily a master of street art, the latest series of his works called "The flock series" deserves attention. From bright colors, metal, plastic and other materials, the artist creates incredible collages, which he calls three-dimensional painting, or abstract sculptures
Formula 1 Retro Poster Series
The most modern cars, equipped with the most modern technologies and created taking into account the most modern technical developments, participate in the Formula 1 class car races. And so it’s very surprising that designer PJ Tierney, who created the 2011 Formula 1 series of advertising posters, did it in a retro style
Social Media Propaganda Poster: A series of concise and inventive social media posters
Like the tentacles of a giant Octopus, social networks embrace, envelop the entire Internet, penetrating deeper and deeper into it, and more and more densely sitting in the mind of a person, eating a fair chunk of his time (mainly a worker), and sometimes occupying an important position in his life. Social networks are friends and enemies, they have fun, love, sell and buy … In light of this popularity, it is not surprising that the American artist Justonescarf depicted social networks in a series of his posters called Soc