6 October 2024

Vhils: Graffiti Art as Architectural Archaeology

Disintegrating walls and peeling posters may not be everyone’s cup of tea. In fact I would venture that to most people they are a rather dispiriting sign of urban decay.  Yet to one artist the sight of crumbling architecture and aged billboards posted one atop another atop another are a creative spur. Vhils creates art not by adding but by taking away.

Vhils, born Alexandre Fartos in 1987 in Portugal, chips, slices, cuts and hammers his remarkable art out of the sides of buildings.  It started when he was a youth in Lisbon.  Portugal’s recent history meant that billboards advertising expensive consumer goods could be pasted directly over posters of socialist ideals left over from the 1974 revolution in a layer which could, depending on the amount of posters, centimeters thick.

17 September 2023

The Red Menace: Anti-Communist Propaganda of the Cold War

Every age has its bogeyman.  If you grew up in 1950s and 60s America you would have been bombarded with anti-communist propaganda. In hindsight it is perhaps easy to raise a wry eyebrow.  Yet at the time the threat was taken very seriously indeed. Here, hysteria intact, are a few of the stranger messages delivered to the American people.

Is your washroom breeding Bolsheviks?
“Employees lose their respect for a company that fails to provide decent facilities for their comfort” goes the by-line for this advertisement.  Yes, quite possibly, but does that really mean that they are going to turn into rampaging Bolsheviks because the paper towels at work are rough on their hands?  This apparently was a real danger back in the fifties and sixties.  Fortunately the introduction of soft tissues on a massive scale helped to avoid the commie takeover of the western world. 

20 September 2020

Lost, Missing and Found Posters - The Funny Side

You have all seen them – you may have even appeared on one yourself – posters proclaiming the loss of a dear pet or relative.  Although some disapprove of them for their intrusion on public space most would not dream of removing them in the hope that whatever was lost will be found. And then there are those who embrace them as a form of alternative art.  Their alternative lost posters amuse and irritate with, quite possible, equal measure. We prefer to see the funny side – and so here are some of the best on the net.

27 July 2011

Alternative Movie Posters by Traumatron

When we came across these great alternative movie posters (which would even make fantastic book covers too) by Flickr User Traumatron Illustration then we had to share them with you.  They are a very cool take on what the posters for these movies might have looked like had a darker imagination been at work perhaps. If you would like to see more of Traumatron’s work then use this link to get to their Flickr Photostream. Oh and before you point it out, we know that The Prisoner was not a movie but it was so good we just had to slip it in here - for good measure!

13 March 2011

Stay Strong, Japan

20 December 2010

Evening Standrd Posters - Anonymous, Satirical and Crafty

Over recent weeks a number of satirical posters for the London Evening Standrd have been appearing throughout the English capital. They reflect the political climate with some satire - as well as some being just for fun. So far the persons involved have failed to put their hands up and claim responsibility. To paraphrase Many Rice-Davies, Well, they would do that, wouldn't they?


The above is our favorite by a long chalk.  It announces that the US government has announced that Wikileaks have Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMDs).  Of course, we all remember the last time that the US said that...

The above is a reference to the recent student protests cum riots which happened after the UK's coalition governments announced a potential tripling of student university fees, meaning that in a few years graduates may well leave education with a £27,000 debt saddle around their necks.  Perhaps if the police hadn't left the sweets in their riot vans the violence could have been avoided.

As an aside, the real deal, the London Evening Standard is a 180 odd year old newspaper with something (ahem) of a conservative nature.  Last year it changed its business plan meaning that for the first time in its history it was given out for nothing.  The newspaper vendors, part of the iconic look, sound and feel of late afternoon London, went the way of the Dodo.  Which was a shame.

The Standrd does, much like its almost namesake, keep an eye on society hatches, matches and dispatches.  So every now and again there is good news.

Although we suspect that it may not be the same people, perhaps the latest perpetrators of satire against the media took their inspiration from an exhibition a few years ago which did a very similar thing.  Although we cannot remember the name of the artist (answers on a postcard) we did manage to find the picture above.

11 June 2010

The Hidden Posters of Notting Hill Gate

In around 1959 Notting Hill Tube Station underwent modernisation.  The old lifts were abandoned and new escalators were installed.  The passageways to the lift were sealed off.  Recent work at the station has rediscovered these passageways and when they were opened they revealed a marvellous time capsule.  The adverts which were on the walls the day the passageways were sealed off remained and reveal a world long since disappeared.

For party travel in the fifties there was really only one option, or so this Victor Galbraith poster for London Transport would have us believe.  Galbraith was a renowned designer who created over twenty public information posters in the fifties and sixties before he emigrated to Australia in 1966.

This lovely poster is for the Daily Mail Ideal Home Exhibition and is perhaps proof that the more things change the more they stay the same.  The yearly exhibition is still going strong (but is now called a show rather than an exhibition) and first began way back in 1908.  Its aim then and now is to bring together anything and everything that combined leads to that ideal home.

A more exact date of when the passageway was sealed off can be ascertained by the film posters that adorn the wall.  A little research shows that The Horse's Mouth and Too Many Crooks were both released in 1958.  The first film starred Alec Guiness who would go on to be Obi-Wan Kenobi in Star Wars.  Too Many Crooks on the other hand starred the inimitable Terry Thomas and is fondly remembered for a hysterical court scene where Thomas' character appears three times on the trot on separate charges in front of a magistrate.

This striking advert for the Royal Blue travel company is very much of its time - full of colour but simple, more of a visual metaphor than any attempt at realism.  However its simplicity belies the fact that it is a very sophisticated piece of design.  It was created by Daphne Padden, who was very much keeping it in the family, as it were.  Her father before her, Percy, had been a very well know artist and illustrator in the 1920s up to the Second World War period.

Americans particularly often dig at the British for their poor dentistry but here is proof, at least, that the Brits have been taking their dental hygiene seriously for a long time.  The poster rather ominously announces you'll wonder where the yellow went which inclines this writer to ponder whether the denizens of London in the fifties wondered where the enamel went too.  Believe it or not Pepsodent is still sold in a number of countries, including India, Malaysia and Finland.

However, the passageway is not open to the public and so the message is that if you live or work close by and want to peek at the posters, please don’t ask!  For obvious health and safety reasons there are no plans at the moment to open general access to the passageway.  The posters are to remain in situ and London Underground will announce any plans for them in the near future.

How did the passageway come to be deserted by the commuting throngs in the first place? A partition was uncovered during recent new modernization work.  When the escalators were installed between 56 and 59 the Central Line station was abandoned.  The Central and Circle lines stations which had been separate entities were joined together following a great deal of planning.

During the reconstruction work the passageway was ‘sliced through’ and partitioned tidily away to slowly molder in somewhat undignified isolation.  We can only wonder whether the builders at the time joked about the passageway being discovered again by future generations.

We would very much like to thank Mike Ashworth, the Design and Heritage Manager of London Underground for his very kind permission to use the pictures above

Please visit his large collection of sets on Flickr when you get a moment - if you enjoy vintage design you will be there for quite a while!