
Layout Design
Museum of the Future Int. Poster
Museum of the Future Int. Poster
Composited an 18' x 24' Infographic poster design inspired by the interior of the Museum of the Future building in Dubai, UAE
Composited an 18' x 24' Infographic poster design inspired by the interior of the Museum of the Future building in Dubai, UAE
Year
2024
Year
2024
Year
2024
Collaborators
N/A
Collaborators
N/A
Collaborators
N/A
Category
Editorial
Category
Editorial
Category
Editorial
Project Duration
4 weeks
Project Duration
4 weeks
Project Duration
4 weeks
Intro
The interior of the Museum of the Future is just as much of an experience as the exterior—its striking white facade conceals an equally compelling interior defined by flowing, organic forms and immersive spatial experiences. This project explores how the museum's interior design language could translate into a promotional poster that captures the wonder of stepping into a futuristic space where technology and human experience converge.

Objective
Create a poster that communicates the museum's core promise—an exploration of the intersection between art, technology, and innovation—while using the museum's interior design vocabulary as the primary visual language. The design needed to intrigue viewers with spatial depth and movement, inviting them to experience the physical space firsthand.


Challenge
Translating three-dimensional architectural forms into a two-dimensional format required finding a visual strategy that maintained the sense of immersion visitors feel inside the museum. The challenge was to capture the fluid, sculptural quality of the interior without resorting to literal photography, creating instead an abstracted, graphic interpretation that felt authentic to the space while being distinctly designerly. Balancing bold typography with organic architectural elements, all while maintaining clarity of message, was essential.

Result
The final poster uses layered, flowing forms derived from the museum's interior curvature to frame and support the typographic hierarchy. By rendering the architectural elements in white and negative space against a clean background, the design maintains the museum's minimalist aesthetic while creating visual tension between geometry and organic form. The poster functions both as a standalone graphic artifact and as an effective visual ambassador for the experience that awaits inside—suggesting complexity, movement, and wonder without revealing everything at once.
Latest Projects

Layout Design
Museum of the Future Int. Poster
Museum of the Future Int. Poster
Composited an 18' x 24' Infographic poster design inspired by the interior of the Museum of the Future building in Dubai, UAE
Composited an 18' x 24' Infographic poster design inspired by the interior of the Museum of the Future building in Dubai, UAE
Year
2024
Year
2024
Year
2024
Collaborators
N/A
Collaborators
N/A
Collaborators
N/A
Category
Editorial
Category
Editorial
Category
Editorial
Project Duration
4 weeks
Project Duration
4 weeks
Project Duration
4 weeks
Intro
The interior of the Museum of the Future is just as much of an experience as the exterior—its striking white facade conceals an equally compelling interior defined by flowing, organic forms and immersive spatial experiences. This project explores how the museum's interior design language could translate into a promotional poster that captures the wonder of stepping into a futuristic space where technology and human experience converge.

Objective
Create a poster that communicates the museum's core promise—an exploration of the intersection between art, technology, and innovation—while using the museum's interior design vocabulary as the primary visual language. The design needed to intrigue viewers with spatial depth and movement, inviting them to experience the physical space firsthand.


Challenge
Translating three-dimensional architectural forms into a two-dimensional format required finding a visual strategy that maintained the sense of immersion visitors feel inside the museum. The challenge was to capture the fluid, sculptural quality of the interior without resorting to literal photography, creating instead an abstracted, graphic interpretation that felt authentic to the space while being distinctly designerly. Balancing bold typography with organic architectural elements, all while maintaining clarity of message, was essential.

Result
The final poster uses layered, flowing forms derived from the museum's interior curvature to frame and support the typographic hierarchy. By rendering the architectural elements in white and negative space against a clean background, the design maintains the museum's minimalist aesthetic while creating visual tension between geometry and organic form. The poster functions both as a standalone graphic artifact and as an effective visual ambassador for the experience that awaits inside—suggesting complexity, movement, and wonder without revealing everything at once.
Latest Projects

Layout Design
Museum of the Future Int. Poster
Museum of the Future Int. Poster
Composited an 18' x 24' Infographic poster design inspired by the interior of the Museum of the Future building in Dubai, UAE
Composited an 18' x 24' Infographic poster design inspired by the interior of the Museum of the Future building in Dubai, UAE
Year
2024
Year
2024
Year
2024
Collaborators
N/A
Collaborators
N/A
Collaborators
N/A
Category
Editorial
Category
Editorial
Category
Editorial
Project Duration
4 weeks
Project Duration
4 weeks
Project Duration
4 weeks
Intro
The interior of the Museum of the Future is just as much of an experience as the exterior—its striking white facade conceals an equally compelling interior defined by flowing, organic forms and immersive spatial experiences. This project explores how the museum's interior design language could translate into a promotional poster that captures the wonder of stepping into a futuristic space where technology and human experience converge.

Objective
Create a poster that communicates the museum's core promise—an exploration of the intersection between art, technology, and innovation—while using the museum's interior design vocabulary as the primary visual language. The design needed to intrigue viewers with spatial depth and movement, inviting them to experience the physical space firsthand.


Challenge
Translating three-dimensional architectural forms into a two-dimensional format required finding a visual strategy that maintained the sense of immersion visitors feel inside the museum. The challenge was to capture the fluid, sculptural quality of the interior without resorting to literal photography, creating instead an abstracted, graphic interpretation that felt authentic to the space while being distinctly designerly. Balancing bold typography with organic architectural elements, all while maintaining clarity of message, was essential.

Result
The final poster uses layered, flowing forms derived from the museum's interior curvature to frame and support the typographic hierarchy. By rendering the architectural elements in white and negative space against a clean background, the design maintains the museum's minimalist aesthetic while creating visual tension between geometry and organic form. The poster functions both as a standalone graphic artifact and as an effective visual ambassador for the experience that awaits inside—suggesting complexity, movement, and wonder without revealing everything at once.


