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14th

This poster serves as a visual response to the current threats facing birthright citizenship in the United States, grounding its message in the 14th Amendment, which guarantees citizenship to all persons born or naturalized in the country. 

Viewers are left to confront the implications themselves: What does citizenship mean today? Who gets to belong? In doing so, the poster becomes less about persuasion and more about confrontation, handing the question back to the audience and challenging them to decide where they stand.

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WHERE   IS 

MY HOME?

This poster is about the growing crisis of first-time homelessness in the United States. A lone figure stands in the foreground, dwarfed by oversized, house-shaped cutouts that cast exaggerated shadows, highlighting the emotional and physical distance between individuals and stable housing.

STATE OF

DEMOCRACY

This poster visually critiques the entanglement of private tech power and public governance, using Tesla as a symbol of Elon Musk’s once expanding influence. While not directly referencing any specific legislation or agenda, its tone and design hint at the growing overlap between corporate ambition and federal decision-making.

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