With many African cultures, it is a widespread pattern of democratic participation – religious rituals, civic affairs, and public gatherings. The call-and-response uses a specific vocabulary for communication while defining a relationship and a place.
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thepointofzero + William van Roden
Contributors: Anna Crider, Jennifer Elsner, Lucy Holmes, Melissa Jun, Leah Kilb, Eva Köhle, Connor Lambrecht, Alix Land, Ali McConnachie, Melissa McGill, Leslie Mello, Ian Moore, Richard Moore, Amanda Morrison, Christopher Pollard, Kristen Rayner, Michael Riley, Matteo Rosso, Udo Schliemann, Matthew Schofield, Clare Summerfield, William van Roden, Adam Windle, Carter Studio, Harry Blake, Ian Whybrow, Juliet Sellars, Kristina Camloh, Malcolm Garrett, Mike Dempsey, Nicki Oldham, Nicola Wordsworth, Nina Eklund, Paul Hanegraaf, Rich Bell, Whybrow Pedrola, Tristram Woolston
Step 1: Photograph and filter
Take a color photograph of where you are now – in or outdoors. In Photoshop, enlarge the photo to 20 x 24 inches / 50.8 x 61 cm. Set image to 72 dpi ... CMYK is preferred. Process the image following predefined halftone specifications.
Step 2: Trace and compose
Where you are right now, find two round or circular objects. Trace them at actual size and transform onto the computer. The shapes must be white – no colors, outlines or other effects. Arrange your actual-sized white shapes onto your filtered image.
Step 3: Document
Place your geographic location in the lower right corner. Inset 1 inch / 2.54 cm from base and from right side. Style the type to Akzidenz Grotesk Bold: 20 pt / 0 tracking / white.
Step 4: Share
Send your poster as .jpeg to us: hello@holmes-studio.com