KIKO is a digital fine art print designed to feel like a piece of mid-century propaganda—bold, blunt, and slightly unsettling once you spend more than a few seconds with it. The title doesn’t mean anything in particular. It’s just a word that feels good to say. That choice is intentional. A lot of things we repeat don’t mean much either.
The visual language pulls from retro brutalism and old political posters: heavy type, aggressive red, halftone texture, simplified figures. It borrows the confidence of propaganda without endorsing the message—because the real message is buried underneath. If you look closely, there’s a tiny line of text that reads “blinded by information.” That’s the quiet part. The rest of the piece is loud on purpose.
This work is about cultural cloning. About lemming-like waves of belief, opinion, outrage, certainty. About how infinite information doesn’t make us wiser—it often does the opposite. The more inputs we absorb, the less room there is for original thought. The more you have, the less you have.
The figures are nearly identical. Doubled. Flattened. Reduced. They aren’t villains. They aren’t heroes. They’re just people shaped by the same feed, the same noise, the same repetition. The poster format reinforces that idea—this is what messaging looks like when it’s designed to be swallowed whole.
KIKO was created digitally, using halftone textures and roughened edges to mimic the imperfections of aging print. It’s meant to feel physical, even though it isn’t. Printed as a high-quality archival giclée, it holds onto that punchy contrast and texture whether it’s framed cleanly or slapped up raw on a wall.
This piece tends to land best in modern spaces that don’t mind a little confrontation. It’s for people who are skeptical of certainty, wary of consensus, and aware that being informed doesn’t automatically mean being awake.