BUTTON / CATALYST
Raising awareness isn’t always about new ideas, sometimes it’s a reminder of what we already know.
Send us your address – we’ll send you this button.
I’ve signed my letters with this gentle reminder/acknowledgment since the early days of Forth Position. The button artwork I mocked up has been drifting from computer to computer on the backburner for almost as long... Lately I have been getting in touch with how much the production of these design objects delights me, how much I miss the smell of the ink, the repetition of form, the vernacular of design.
I wrote a short piece for The Missing Point about how YOU ARE FREE resonates for me in the current political climate. Now also available as a podcast.
Showing posts with label Print. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Print. Show all posts
NEW YORK COALITION FOR PEACE & JUSTICE
OUR GRIEF IS NOT A CRY FOR WAR
Awareness from the Forth Position Archive
10,000 New Yorkers marched to Times Square on October 7th 2001, united in common conviction that the United States Government should not exploit the September 11th attacks as an excuse for war.
March end rally at Times Square – photo by Diane Greene Lent
Forth, in conjunction with the coalition's Arts & Culture Working Group, produced 200 signs for this demonstration. Half of these read NEW YORK NOT IN OUR NAME / OUR GRIEF IS NOT A CRY FOR WAR, but it was the ISLAM, ARABS & IMMIGRANTS ARE NOT THE ENEMY sign that received the most press.
Over the following year Forth designed additional signs to supplement the initial five, flyers, buttons, t-shirts, a banner, and other materials for multiple marches, rallies and forums around the interrelated issues of the war on terror, illegal detentions, immigrant solidarity, civil liberties, and budget cuts. The NYCPJ symbol is a realignment of the negative spaces within the common peace symbol, the triangular shapes assembled by multiple hands working together. The symbol was designed as a representation of the concept of coalition and a reflection on rebuilding peace in the aftermath of 9/11.
*A dark line is visible around the tube (bottom) of the featured MAKE HISTORY NOT WAR sign. This was Forth founder Thomas Gallagher’s personal sign, marked this way to make it easy to spot inverted among the others in bags for transport. Occupied with logistics at the rally site, he did not get to march, so his sign marched without him...
Awareness from the Forth Position Archive
10,000 New Yorkers marched to Times Square on October 7th 2001, united in common conviction that the United States Government should not exploit the September 11th attacks as an excuse for war.

Forth, in conjunction with the coalition's Arts & Culture Working Group, produced 200 signs for this demonstration. Half of these read NEW YORK NOT IN OUR NAME / OUR GRIEF IS NOT A CRY FOR WAR, but it was the ISLAM, ARABS & IMMIGRANTS ARE NOT THE ENEMY sign that received the most press.
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December 16 - Hoy photo by Rafael Fernandez* |
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December 16 – Rockefeller Center march – banner design by Kinkos® |
Over the following year Forth designed additional signs to supplement the initial five, flyers, buttons, t-shirts, a banner, and other materials for multiple marches, rallies and forums around the interrelated issues of the war on terror, illegal detentions, immigrant solidarity, civil liberties, and budget cuts. The NYCPJ symbol is a realignment of the negative spaces within the common peace symbol, the triangular shapes assembled by multiple hands working together. The symbol was designed as a representation of the concept of coalition and a reflection on rebuilding peace in the aftermath of 9/11.
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Bus Sign Up |
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Bus Ticket |
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April 20, 2002 – Washington DC march – banner design by Forth |
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New York Taxi Workers Alliance march - Midwood, Brooklyn |
















*A dark line is visible around the tube (bottom) of the featured MAKE HISTORY NOT WAR sign. This was Forth founder Thomas Gallagher’s personal sign, marked this way to make it easy to spot inverted among the others in bags for transport. Occupied with logistics at the rally site, he did not get to march, so his sign marched without him...
STAND UP NEW YORK

Awareness from the Forth Position Archive
Central to the Stand Up mobilization were solidarity actions around a host of related peace & justice issues. To this effect, later versions of the flyer contained a full calendar of 12 unique events. A lead banner and five solidarity banners were designed to increase visibility of these issues, and mobilized at numerous actions over the next several months including the march / rally in Washington DC on October 26th, 2002.
March (Solidarity) Banners – 6-10' x 2'
All black and white photos by Fred Askew
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