Looks like they've gone social-media-official with a Facebook Page, Twitter page and new artwork! What do you guys think? I personally like it. It's simple, elegant and to the point.
My only issue with it is that it might be a bit too polished. It feels like the show is going for a kind of "gritty" take on the founding fathers, and the logo maybe doesn't express that. Still, I like it much better than the Public art.
In the Heights logo he's pointing up same as this new logo. Watch all his future Broadway shows be a logo of someone pointing up. His signature. That would be cool.
Art work is probably temporary as a placeholder since it was only confirmed for Broadway just less than a week ago. I doubt the ad agency and creatives confirmed this so quickly as the official poster art for Broadway due to the timing. ---
^JoseLee_ well.... we'll see
"Anything you do, let it it come from you--then it will be new."
Sunday in the Park with George
It does look remarkably like the artwork for HANDS ON A HARDBODY.
Tonya Pinkins: Then we had a "Lot's Wife" last June that was my personal favorite. I'm still trying to get them to let me sing it at some performance where we get to sing an excerpt that's gone.
Tony Kushner: You can sing it at my funeral.
I like this logo a lot. i'm sure many of the associations (Saturday Night Fever, Michael Jackson, the Statue of Liberty) are intentional. Of course, the pose also hints at the duel.
I think it's very attractive, and the typography is beautiful. It doesn't strike me as too small at all. It's quite legible.
But I know that people are much happier complaining about graphic design than enjoying it. These days, everyone with a computer thinks they can do a better design than anyone else.
She was a good cook, as cooks go; and as cooks go, she went.
What are the chances this artwork will get changed before the Broadway marquee goes up? Are they under some sort of contract to use the artwork created by the advertising firm they hired?
BRIDGES changed their hideous artwork, but it was lamentably late in the run arguably after the damage had been done.
My main problem with this image is that it seems like it would be more appropriate for a drama about Hamilton rather than a modern music-filled musical,