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Four solid black angular shapes float across a pale field as reductive silhouettes of ancient Greek theatres, captioned bilingually in Greek and English at the bottom-left.
Summary
A row of four solid black angular shapes reads as a set of reduced architectural silhouettes for ancient Greek theatre venues, with a bilingual Greek-and-English caption pinned to the lower-left corner.
Visual description
A near-white background carries four distinct flat-black forms spaced across the upper two-thirds: a pentagon-like block, a wide trapezoid with a clipped corner, a tall leaning parallelogram, and a smaller angled hexagon. Each is a clean hard-edged silhouette with no detail, gradient, or outline, so they read as a pictogram family rather than literal drawings. In the bottom-left corner, two stacked columns of small sans-serif text list the venues in Greek (Αρχαίο Θέατρο Επιδαύρου, Ωδείο Ηρώδου Αττικού, Πειραιώς 260) beside their English equivalents (Ancient Theatre of Epidaurus, Odeon of Herodus Atticus, Peiraios 260). The vast empty space does most of the work.
Key takeaway
Reducing a set of real places to a coordinated family of flat geometric silhouettes, varied enough to be distinct yet visually of-a-piece. Anchoring the only text in one corner as a paired bilingual list lets the shapes own the rest of the canvas and signals a cultural, institutional voice.
Reuse notes
Ideal for an arts festival, cultural institution, or wayfinding system that needs a coherent set of venue or location marks. The two-language caption block is a clean pattern for any bilingual cultural brand. Leans quiet and gallery-like, so it suits programmes, posters, and signage more than loud commercial work.









