A Cross Cultural Collection of Visual Voices

TYPOGRAPHY, PRINT
A Cross Cultural Collection of Visual Voices is a book that looks at how design communicates through global perspectives. It gathers posters, typography, and other visual works arranged in a format that uses maps and cartographic references to suggest movement and connection. The project was created to question the idea of a Western centered design canon and to show how different cultural voices can exist alongside one another.

Research included examining examples of international design, reading criticism about the canon, and exploring how maps could visualize cultural exchange. The finished book creates a reading experience where each page feels like entering a new space. It shows that archives are shaped by design decisions and that visual storytelling can make cultural diversity more visible. The project demonstrates how design can function both as an archive and as a way to rethink cultural histories.



ROLE
Concept development 
Visual research
Editorial and layout design



AUDIENCE
People who are curious about how design reflects culture, those who want to see how visual languages from different regions speak to one another, challenge dominant narratives, and create new ways of understanding global design.
OUTPUT
Visual archive
Perfect binding