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Exhibition poster featuring the title 'END OF THE SINE' composed of flowing electric-blue organic curves layered beneath and over a bold black display headline, on a cream background.
Summary
An art-school exhibition poster where flowing, organic electric-blue curves form the title and layer beneath/over a bold black sans-serif display headline, creating a dynamic typographic collision on cream stock.
Visual description
Cream-colored background (likely printed stock). At the top, a small horizontal line of tiny all-caps sans-serif crediting designers and a gallery address (FIT). The main composition centers on a typographic collision: oversized electric-blue (#083AF3) organic, wavy letterforms (appearing to spell parts of the title) flow and curve across the composition like liquid or ribbons. Layered on top and underneath in bold black sans-serif is the exhibition headline "END OF THE SINE" in a geometric display typeface, with letters overlapping the blue curves creating areas of optical mixing. The forms are dynamic and suggest movement. On the right side, exhibition details are set in small black sans-serif (dates, venue). The layout is asymmetric; the blue curves extend to the right edge and beyond. The overall effect is energetic and contemporary.
Key takeaway
The fluidity of the blue curves contrasts with the geometric rigidity of black type, creating visual tension that feels intentional. Layering type elements at different angles and scales breaks rigid grid-based poster conventions. The neon blue on cream is legible and striking without a dark background. The organic/geometric contrast is a sophisticated move.
Reuse notes
Ideal for creative industries, art schools, design studios, and cultural institutions. Works well for youth-focused or experimental brands. The high contrast reads sharply at small sizes. Avoid if you need conservative, institutional branding; this is deliberately avant-garde. Best executed with intentional type selection and careful color choice. Translates well to digital displays and large-format print.









