Poster for Tomorrow: Pakistani student's design features among 100 best in the world

Child labour, modern slavery, fair and equal work opportunities were the themes explored in this year's contest.
Published December 6, 2014

Child labour, modern slavery, fair and equal work opportunities were the themes explored in this year's contest.


Poster for Tomorrow was formed in 2009 in Paris by a group of artists encouraging people, both in and outside the design community, to create posters which would stimulate debate on human rights issues.The theme for this year’s competition was the universal right to fair employment with exhibitions held across the globe in 30 countries.

 Sara Nisar's “Understand the Difference” came in at 91
Sara Nisar's “Understand the Difference” came in at 91
For the first time in six years, an entry from Pakistan made it to the top 100 posters. Sara Nisar’s “Understand the Difference” was selected amongst 4,301 entries from 133 countries which were judged online by a jury of 100 artists.

The 22-year-old Nisar, who is a second-year Visual Arts student at Karachi University, was moved by the plight of the children working in the torturous brick kiln factories in Pakistan and aimed to show the two different worlds that exist in the country.

"My poster is a super imposition of two children — both having very different futures. Some children do get a chance to have a secure childhood while others do not get the care, comfort and security that they deserve. This variation is not just class-based, it happens amongst privileged children as well, many do not get the childhood that they deserve," Sara, who made it to the top 100 on her first attempt, says.

Sara has an interest in using art as a medium for social activism and she believes that for a country like Pakistan, which has a low literacy rate, design is a medium to reach out to everyone.

"Design is a way for me to talk to people; to fulfill a social cause that is so close to me."

The purpose of this year's theme was to make raise awareness about the rights of workers; from the small boy working in a sweatshop to the woman being paid less than her male colleagues or the physically challenged man denied an office job because of his wheelchair.

In Pakistan, the exhibition featuring the top 100 posters was held at the Arts Council, Karachi on Friday.

The top 10 posters from the contest are below:

 1. Nacho Arbesu, Spain, "This is not a machine"
1. Nacho Arbesu, Spain, "This is not a machine"

 2. Onur Askin, Turkey, "Disability?"
2. Onur Askin, Turkey, "Disability?"

 3. David Criado, Spain, "Isn't work"
3. David Criado, Spain, "Isn't work"

 4. Kun Ji, China, "Too heavy to bear"
4. Kun Ji, China, "Too heavy to bear"

 5. Marco Toxico, Bolivia, "Right to work right"
5. Marco Toxico, Bolivia, "Right to work right"

 6. Tomaso Marcholla, Italy, "Tool"
6. Tomaso Marcholla, Italy, "Tool"

 7. Sergio Olivotti, Italy, "Burocracy kills good works"
7. Sergio Olivotti, Italy, "Burocracy kills good works"

 8. Veronika Petho, Hungary, "Right to play"
8. Veronika Petho, Hungary, "Right to play"

 9. Tuwanon Piyanuttapool, Thailand, "New arrival"
9. Tuwanon Piyanuttapool, Thailand, "New arrival"

 10. Liat Segev, Israel, "The life inside your IPHONE"
10. Liat Segev, Israel, "The life inside your IPHONE"