Abuse Disguised As Love

Typography



Challenge:
South Africa has one of the highest woman abuse rates in the world. One woman or girl child is raped, sexually assaulted or physically abused every four minutes and one woman is killed by an intimate partner every eight minutes.

According to the SA Medical Research Council, the majority of these crimes occur in domestic settings by men who form part of the family unit.

Insight:
Because these abusive men form part of the family, they are often able to manipulate women through loving words and gifts designed to mask the abuse. The victims become trapped in an abusive cycle, unable to break free because their abuser is also their perceived source of love.

Solution:
To help women to recognize this false love for what it is, we created a series of posters, highlighting different types of abuse that are often disguised as love in the home.


Poster 1 - Husband

This poster is focused on women abused by their husbands or intimate partners and features a ‘loving’ phrase disguised as a ‘loving’ gift of flowers. Upon closer inspection, the chilling reality of the abusive motive behind the words becomes clear. “No one will ever know how much I love you” becomes a veiled threat that keeps years of abuse hidden behind closed doors.




Poster 2 - Uncle

This execution is focused on teenage girl abuse by an uncle or older man related to the family. It features a ‘loving’ phrase disguised as a ‘loving’ gift of make-up, something to make a young teen feel like she’s ‘all grown up’. Upon closer inspection, the chilling reality of the abusive motive behind the words becomes clear: it becomes a trap that lures a teenage girl into the grasp of a sexually abusive older man.

Translation:
Headline: Show Uncle how much you’ve grown, (Literally: Show Uncle that you’re a woman now.)

Poster 3 - Uncle

This execution is focused on girl children, abused by fathers or trusted male family members. It features what seems like a ‘loving’ phrase disguised as a ‘loving’ gift of balloons. Upon closer inspection, the chilling reality of the abusive motive behind the words becomes clear: it becomes a bribe that manipulates a child’s love and lures her into a sexually abusive situation.

Translation
Headline: Daddy’s got a little present for you






Credits

Chief Creative Officer:
Pepe Marais
Executive Creative Director:
Roanna Williams
Creative Director:
Natalie Walker
Art Director:
Katt Phatt, Michelle Mckenna
Illustrator:
Katt PhattWriter:
Michelle Mckenna
Retoucher:
Grant Moore

Thank you



Abuse Disguised As Love
Published:

Abuse Disguised As Love

Created typographic posters for POWA (People Opposing Women Abuse). The campaign is meant to help women recognize false love for what it is, high Read More

Published: