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Manifest Equality – Ghosts In America by Mel Lim

Manifest Equality - Mel Lim

Ghosts in America by Mel Lim for Manifest Equality

Check out our latest art piece for Manifest Equality. We are so happy and honored to be part of this great cause.

Manifest Equality

Manifest Equality


Check out our Q&A.

Why have you chosen to participate in Manifest Equality?
All men and women are created EQUAL. No matter where you are from, where you grew up, what family you were born into, we all deserve the same rights as everyone else.

Describe a bit about your submission to the gallery or the process you are putting into it.
The red, white and blue stripes that drape over our bodies represent the censorship our society and government have placed on us. We can no longer be heard, or seen, our sexuality questioned, probed and censored. We are treated like second class citizens. When you rape us of our rights, you also hurt the children that they love.

But now is the time, where we must fight for our civil rights as American citizens. Our feet maybe shackled, but we are united as one. We fight! We demand justice, love, equality and respect.

We are not plastic Barbie dolls but we want to show you how superficial our world is.

From Left to Right:
Couple 1: A typical white hetero sexual couple with a child.
Couple 2: A lesbian couple with an adopted girl.
Couple 3: A gay couple with an adopted baby.
Couple 4: An inter-racial couple.
Couple 5: A transgender couple.

Which person do you identify with? Hopefully all.

What else would you like to manifest?
All products, objects or ideas should be designed with green accord, for the betterment of human interaction, progression of science and/or towards a good cause.

Close up of art piece.

Close up of art piece.

Mel Lim has adopted The Designers Accord

The Designers Accord

The Designers Accord

We are honored to be part of The Designers Accord’s mission.

(This is an excerpt from their website. )

Mission
The Designers Accord is a global coalition of designers, educators, and business leaders working together to create positive environmental and social impact.

Adopters of the Designers Accord commit to five guidelines that provide collective and individual ways to integrate sustainability into design. The Designers Accord provides a participatory platform with online and offline manifestations so that members have access to a community of peers who share methodologies, resources, and experiences around environmental and social issues in design.
Continue reading “Mel Lim has adopted The Designers Accord” →

To design or not to design?

I was recently approached by a friend to help design a product line for her
new company. I felt honored and excited until she told me what her idea was.
It was a “politically” driven product and unfortunately, my views fell upon the
opposing side…I struggled with the request for a while, and I think I would
not have had this dilemma if this product line had encompassed all political parties. I
mean, after all, as a designer, I should be versatile enough to design for
all. 

I guess it was not a question of abilities, but rather a personal vendetta /
choice of my own. Then I started asking questions like what if it was beyond politics;
what about religion, social causes, racial issues, tobacco, alcohol? Where
do we draw the line?

Here we are celebrating the success of President Obama 2008 campaign, with
hundreds of articles written about it’s phenomenal brand strategies, the
success of it’s design execution. And yes, he was the more popular, cool
candidate and he won. And of course I stood in line for 5 hours to vote for
him. BUT what if he had NOT been the popular vote? What if he had been the “other” guy
and you had to design for the “other” party?

Are designers similar to attorneys? Are we obliged as a professional,  to
consider or take on projects regardless of content, based on that client asking for our help
and them being ready to pay for our services? Or do we have the moral obligation to truly
investigate the repercussions of the projects we take on and the design we
put out to the world? 

What if the result of our designs impact the world in a way we may be horrified with?

It maybe an easier decision to make if you are asked to design for a party
or a cause that you TRULY believe in. My question is how do you tackle a
design project you fundamentally do not believe in, but may need to keep your
design studio up and running? Equally so, how do you design for the less popular, non-politically
correct group? What if you are asked to design for anti-gay groups,
anti-women’s rights, or a tobacco company, or a company that profits off 3rd
world child labor? 

I guess in many ways, it’s a privilege to run my own design studio, where I
am able to make choices as to what type projects to take on and who to say
NO to. But to those working fulltime for a corporate studio/agency; how do you tackle
situations like this?