Size: 57 x 39 inches
About The 100 Best Posters Collection: This poster was originally created by Anton Beeke in 1989 for the Stedelijk Museum. This is an official reissue from 1994 from the collection The 100 best posters from Europe and the United States / 1945-1990.
About the poster: For this exhibition of young artists from four South American countries, Anthon Beeke eschewed the usual clichés and created a poster that was also a political statement. As he explains, "The U of Uruguay has been filled in with the feathers and mourning colors of the Indians who ... are being massacred.
The A for Argentina is filled with fragments of the most virulent cacti I could find... [They] are the symbol of the tactility of that country, the evilness of it, in fact.
The B for Brazil is filled with meat. ... In Brazil a great deal is sacrificed for the economic needs of a handful of large landowners... and someone who doesn't agree with this— and there are quite a few-is an obstacle standing in the way of their profit....
The C of Chile is filled with human hair. Over the centuries the cutting of hair has always been a hobby of types that thought they were right."
Even though this poster appears very South American in its colors and picturesque quality, it is in fact a political plea-which in no way detracts from its graphic force. (Source: The 100 best posters from Europe and the United States / 1945-1990, p.212)