Inspired by Hossein Ronaghi's letter, this graphic transforms the names of the oppressed, executed, and jailed over the past 45 years into one defiant, unified body: the Nation of Iran. The design asserts that the identity of the people is inseparable from the memory of those who have suffered, declaring: "We are not just names—we are one."
"Unveiled Testimony," is a visual act of resistance and part of a multi-panel social media campaign. It directly confronts the regime's new compulsory Hijab law. The design features a collage of real quotes and messages shared by ordinary women on social media, transforming their personal defiance into a monumental, collective statement.
This typographic poster, titled by the Persian phrase: "In the dark curtain of war, the voice of the city's restless women speaks the language of peace." Designed during a time of increased rumors about a possible foreign attack on Iran, the graphic asserts that the nation's true voice for peace is not political, but the unwavering moral authority of its citizens.
visual manifesto inspired by Shervin Hajipour’s anthem, "Baraye" (For...). It captures the myriad of shared hopes and daily grievances that fueled the "Woman, Life, Freedom" protests. The design uses typography to transform the song's poetic list into a collective demand for fundamental change, highlighting the power of art to articulate the deepest desires of a suppressed nation.
This poster captures the heart of the "Woman, Life, Freedom" movement, inspired by Shervin Hajipour’s anthem, "Baraye." The design transforms the song’s poetic list of collective frustrations and hopes into a visual manifesto. It powerfully asserts that the protests are driven by countless shared, deeply personal demands for justice and dignity. (49 words)
This poster confronts the grim reality of the soaring number of executions in Iran, a brutal tool of state control against its own citizens. This visual metaphor conveys the suffocating, life-threatening weight of state power and its readiness to use capital punishment as a means of political repression and to instill fear.
This graphic confronts the absurd: the arrest of editor Hossein Shanbeh Zadeh for simply leaving a single period (".") in a comment. The poster elevates this punctuation mark into a symbol of resistance, highlighting a regime so sensitive to criticism that even the smallest, most subtle act of defiance is treated as a severe threat.
This design is inspired by Hossein Shanbeh Zadeh's powerful message from prison: "I will make one paper crane every day... until I reach my only wish: Freedom!" The poster visualizes this daily, enduring act of hope. It frames the pursuit of freedom not as a single event, but as a patient, persistent commitment, showcasing the resilience of the human spirit under oppression.