
In the grand tradition of laughing to keep from crying, this poster project offers a satirical chronicle events of the years that passed — a visual anthology of headlines that made us gasp, groan, and occasionally question reality itself. With a careful blend of irony, wit, and artistic flair, I’ve transformed a year of global oddities and local misadventures into a single, eye-catching display. Consider it a time capsule of chaos, preserved with humor and presented with just enough seriousness to pretend I’m not joking.

2024
“the trash keeps piling”
Volume IV arrives with all the subtlety of an online argument at 3 a.m. This year’s themes include presidential elections (and the fraud everyone’s either certain happened or certain didn’t), red pills of various colors, motivational masculinity turned online spectacle, politicians with suspiciously Slavic leanings and political circus. As always, I offer no solutions—just a visual summary of the noise, contradictions, and conspiracy-laced charisma that defined another chapter in the global fever dream.

2023
“everything is fine”
By the third installment, themes have become optional. This poster captures the general ambiance of yet another year—uncertain, inconsistent, and somehow still louder than the last. There’s no single focus this time, just a curated selection of moments that felt significant, confusing, or accidentally funny summed up in a perfectly balanced mess. Business as usual.

2022
“more trash to keep the fire going”
Following the vague existential confusion of the first poster, this installment shifts focus to something far less abstract: war. Specifically, the ongoing conflict in Ukraine—a stark reminder that reality still outpaces satire. With the usual blend of dry humor and visual irony, we explore how a modern war unfolds in the age of memes, misinformation, and geopolitical déjà vu.

2021
“the spark that lighted the dumpster fire”
This poster is the first in a series offering a yearly summary of… whatever that was. Rather than focus on specific events, I choose to depict the overall atmosphere that fits the overall view—confusing, mildly alarming, occasionally funny (intentionally or not). It’s a visual record of the general feeling of existing, one year at a time.