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Show Notes:
The World Cup kicks off tomorrow in Mexico City — and Sami has been waiting four years for this. Sticker collections, Netflix documentaries, 4am alarm plans. Full obsession mode. But this is Art Virgins, so naturally, it's also about art.
It started with a blog in his inbox listing every World Cup poster from 1930 to 2026. A year ago, he would have scrolled through it and moved on. This time, he couldn't stop. He recognized Art Deco in the first poster. Then Futurism. Then a name that stopped him cold. World Cup posters don't just decorate events — they wear the art movements of their decade. Every style choice tells you something about the world at the time it was made.
So Sami walks through 22 posters: a goalkeeper shaped by fascism, flags stitched together in the aftermath of World War II, Joan Miro commissioned as Spain emerged from the Franco era, Annie Leibovitz making history as the first photographer ever hired for an official poster, and three artists from three countries co-designing a single image over WhatsApp.
Then comes his new obsession: 48 unofficial posters by design studio Mucho — one per qualified nation, built on one mission. Football posters your partner would actually let you hang in the living room. He runs his three F's on the collection: Forget it, Fling it, Frame it. And he wants to sell a kidney to buy all of them.
Highlights:
- How a blog in Sami's inbox changed the way he sees World Cup posters
- Why style is never neutral — every poster choice reflects its political moment
- 1930 Uruguay — Art Deco at its purest, can sell for up to $20,000 at auction
- 1934 Italy — Futurism, Mussolini's propaganda machine, and why the poster feels aggressive
- 1938 France — the last before World War II interrupted everything for 12 years
- 1950 Brazil — Internationalism, flags layered on a single sock, a world learning to cooperate again
- 1958 Sweden — Minimalist silhouette, the first poster Sami genuinely loves
- 1978 Argentina — Pointillism style hiding a military dictatorship's PR campaign
- 1982 Spain — Joan Miro, Tapies, Chilida; each city got its own poster as Spain reinvented itself after Franco
- 1986 Mexico — Annie Leibovitz, the only photographer ever commissioned for an official poster
- 1990 Italy — Alberto Burri's Post-Modernism, the Colosseum distorted into a stadium
- 1994 USA — Peter Max, cosmic pop art, psychedelic colors
- 1998 France — a student from Beaux-Arts Montpellier won an open competition
- 2002 Japan/Korea — two calligraphers, two days, one poster
- 2018 Russia — Igor Gurovich, Lev Yashin, and the visual language of Russian Constructivism
- 2026 USA/Canada/Mexico — Carson Ting, Minerva JM, and Hank Willis Thomas co-design one poster over WhatsApp; 16 city posters including a lobster goalkeeper for Boston and an astronaut for Houston
- Mucho's "Art of Sport" collection: 48 unofficial posters, one per nation, $125 each at plotnetprints.com
- Sami's three F's applied: Forget it (New Zealand), Fling it (South Korea), Frame it (Sweden's IKEA poster)
Artists & Designers Mentioned:
- Guillermo Laborde — 1930 Uruguay poster
- Gino Boccasile — leading propaganda poster artist of Fascist Italy, 1934
- Joan Miró — 1982 Spain poster, surrealism giant
- Antoni Tàpies, Eduardo Chillida, Sora — 1982 Spain city posters
- Annie Leibovitz — 1986 Mexico poster, Rolling Stone and Vanity Fair photographer
- Alberto Burri — 1990 Italy poster, Post-Modernism
- Peter Max — 1994 USA poster, pop art and cosmic psychedelic style
- Nathalie Le Gall — 1998 France poster, Beaux-Arts Montpellier student
- Igor Gurovich — 2018 Russia poster, Constructivism
- Lev Yashin — legendary Soviet goalkeeper depicted in 2018 poster
- Carson Ting (Canada), Minerva GM (Mexico), Hank Willis Thomas (USA) — 2026 official poster
- Mucho Design Studio — "Art of Sport" collection, 48 unofficial nation posters
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