Stealth
Stealth
Stealth
Stealth
Stealth
Stealth

Stealth

Map, New York, New York, 2007

Description

Stealth was designed to promote The Map Office (Map) at the opening of the 2007 summer-season exhibitions at the Studio Museum in Harlem, a contemporary art institution that focuses on artists of African or African-American descent. Because Harlem’s past and present identity resonates strongly with Map, the piece is an exploration of identity. What does it mean and how can it be portrayed, racially, socially, texturally, sculpturally, optically and graphically?

We wanted to make a poster that despite being a physical object was about invisibility. Its folded form evokes that of the stealth bomber (hence the name), which is a feat of engineering and design genius—a visually striking object that has been built to be invisible. What emerges as you look at the piece is a quote from Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man, which relayed the feeling that Map was looking for in the piece—“I am invisible, understand, simply because people refuse to see me”—highlighting the ideals of graphic design and the strength of its bond to the creation of identity.

The typeface is Foundry Gridnik, chosen because of its rectilinearity and acute angles, which makes it more legible within the horizontal lines of the piece.

Collections: AIGA 365: 29 (2008)
Repository: Denver Art Museum
Discipline: Promotional design and advertising
Format: Posters

Credits

Design firm
Map
Creative director
Eddie Opara
Designers
Ryan Lauer, Salvador Orara
Printer
Ken Widder Design
Printing method
Digital offset lithography
Paper
Domtar, 80 lb., (cover)
Fabricators
John de Menil, Frank LaRocca, Ryan Lauer, Salvador Orara
Typeface
Gridnik
Client
The Map Office
Loading...
Loading...