The MET Cloisters
Infographic Poster Design
Summer 2021
Showcased at Design Philadelphia 2021
GDUSA 2022 Award Winner
Featured in Design Philadelphia 2021, the MET Cloisters poster is designed to highlight the relationship of wealth with art curation through the imagery of a broken stained glass window. Each part of the MET Cloisters is sourced from different areas of medieval Europe, and this poster color codes each location so viewers can trace the origin of either an art piece or an architectural form back from where it was taken. With the rhythm of blackletter typography, shattered panes of hyper-saturated artwork and architecture, and the background grid phasing in and out from the foreground, the design brings to life the diverse beauty of the MET Cloisters and explodes its history into view.
Caretake of Her
Theater Poster Design
April 2023
Written by kanishk pandey
Public Reading at Sanguine Theater Company’s Spring Break Festival
Caretake of Her is a play about Cyrus, a man who is suddenly thrown into a spiral when his vegetable grandmother is moved into his and his fiancee’s one-bedroom apartment as she enters hospice. Using photographs taken from the rehearsals, the poster highlights Cyrus’s spiraling life and his hyperfixation on his dying grandmother’s lost royal heritage. The typography heavily interacts and interferes with the imagery of the Iron Maiden statue (who represents the grandmother’s character in the play).
Alice Heart
Film Poster Design
March 2024
Written and Directed by Mike Macera
Set in black & white Philadelphia, Alice-Heart navigates city life, friendships, and homework. The mumble-core style of the film translates into the poster with its simple cursive type, black and white photography, and candid yet dramatic framing of its characters.
White Bitches in Delhi
Theater Poster Design
April 2023
Written by Ellis Abigail Stump
Staged Production for Columbia University’s MFA Theater Program
Sending up both Hollywood and Bollywood rom com tropes, WHITE BITCHES IN DELHI traverses savior complexes, self-imposed stereotypes, growth, and fate. The poster’s style is reminiscient of Bollywood movie posters with a bold red and orange color palette, fun gold type, and framing garlands that hint to the play’s wedding at the finale.