Annual IDEA Interprets Poster Project—Second Year IDEA students explored a timely and visceral emotion: Evil

Annual IDEA Interprets Poster Project—Second Year IDEA students explored a timely and visceral emotion: Evil

At the end of each fall term, the final project in the second-year students’ typography and illustration classes is a poster project. The challenge is to create a unique visual representation of a broad, single-word theme. In past years the themes have been Water, The Body, Fear, and Growth. This year the students explored a timely and visceral emotion: Evil. Their solutions run the gamut from malicious plotting over a refreshment to a glimpse into a devil’s off-hours.

For the past 4 years, IDEA Interprets Annual Poster Show has been an annual school project that culminates in a public exhibition at the Ferry Building Gallery in West Vancouver. Due to health measures around COVID-19, this spring’s show has been cancelled.

In light of this, we invite you to enjoy the images here on the IDEA School of Design blog. Thirteen of them will also appear in an upcoming 2021 promotional wall calendar. Shown above: “Nurture” illustration by Talia Rouck.

This illustrated poster discusses the concept of evil as an outside force that is most often taught, and that there is always human intention within evil acts.
— Talia Rouck (IDEA Grad 2022)

About IDEA Interprets

IDEA Interprets is an annual exhibition by Capilano University Bachelor of Design 2nd year students which runs every spring at The Ferry Building Gallery located at 1414 Argyle Ave, Ambleside Landing, West Vancouver, British Columbia. Instructor: Pascal Milelli.

Maria Centola showcases her design and illustration skills in mobile games, websites and apps as a Digital Designer in London

Maria Centola showcases her design and illustration skills in mobile games, websites and apps as a Digital Designer in London

First year IDEA student Terence Zhu’s love of robots, gas masks, cyberpunk, creepiness and Japanese tokusatsu shines through in his self-portrait

First year IDEA student Terence Zhu’s love of robots, gas masks, cyberpunk, creepiness and Japanese tokusatsu shines through in his self-portrait