| Role | Duration | Tools | Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| Graphic | Aug-Sep 2025 | Procreate,Illustrator,Photoshop | Acedmic Project |
Brief
To translate universal nuclear disarmament discourse into visual resistance,
by creating a collection of posters and pop-up exhibition that challenges the
normalization of violence, provokes civic imagination and advocates for a
world without nuclear weapons.
Debrief
The exhibition is structured around our central argument, divided into three
sub-themes and a final section called Rhetoric. While the sections provide
conceptual guidance, their division is subtle, allowing visitors to navigate the
space freely. The Rhetoric segment is positioned at the end of the exhibition
to provoke reflection, encouraging viewers to question a world in which the
existence of nuclear weapons is normalized and accepted as inevitable.
What are nuclear
weapons/ the extent
of the devestation
they cause
Mismanagement of
resources
Reliable and
unreliable countries
Narrative
FINAL ARGUMENT
Nuclear weapon development and existence are no longer about defense, we
are inching closer to offense in a world that grows increasingly intolerant.
The project critically engages with the complex discourse of nuclear disarmament
through art and design. Rather than offering solutions, it seeks to provoke reflection
on the human and political costs of nuclear narratives-inviting viewers to question
their normalization and engage more actively with the call for disarmament.
POSTERS
poster 1
This poster highlights the two contrasting stances within the nuclear discourse. The posters reflect the systematic, state-driven narrative that presents nuclear weapons as necessary, while the graffiti embodies the voice
of activists resisting this message. Positioned between these opposing perspectives, the everyday passerby often remains indifferent, distanced from an issue perceived as too remote from daily life.
poster 2
This poster depicts the radiation of a nuclear explosion and its hazardous
nature.
poster 3
This poster underscores how the development and maintenance of nuclear weapons overshadow vital concerns such as education, healthcare, and food security.
poster 4
This poster critiques the mismanagement of resources while also commenting on the behavior of world powers, suggesting that access to
nuclear weapons is treated like a reward system, granted to nations deemed “well-behaved ”, much like giving a sticker to a child.
poster 5
This poster highlights the deceptive nature of nations in their discussions about war and weapons.
poster 6
This poster conveys the precariousness of life in a world governed by nuclear power, highlighting that one life has already been lost in the “game of nations” through Hiroshima and Nagasaki. It underscores the fragility of existence, where disaster can strike at any moment, claiming anyone.
poster 7
This poster challenges viewers’ moral stance by presenting a choice between a world with nuclear weapons and a world without, framed in the familiar
format of a CAPTCHA test.




