Peace Sign
The ubiquitous icon of the Aquarian age and one of the most
widely known symbols in the world.
In Britain it is recognised as
standing for nuclear disarmament – and in particular as the logo
of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND).
In the United
States and much of the rest of the world it is known more broadly
as the peace symbol.
It was designed in 1958 by Gerald Holtom, a professional
designer and artist and a graduate of the Royal College of Arts.
He showed his preliminary sketches to a small group of people in
the Peace News office in North London and to the Direct Action
Committee Against Nuclear War, one of several smaller
organisations that came together to set up CND.
A masterpiece of design, it looked equally good on a letterhead
and spray painted on a wall. Anyone could draw it and by 1970
everyone knew what it stood for. Within the eternal circle, it
combined a stylised version of the semaphore letters C, N and D.
There have been claims that the symbol has older, occult or
anti-Christian associations. In South Africa, under the apartheid
regime, there was an official attempt to ban it. Various far-right
and fundamentalist American groups have also spread the idea of
Satanic associations or condemned it as a Communist sign.
However the origins and the ideas behind the symbol have been
clearly described, both in letters and in interviews, by Gerald
Holtom. His original, first sketches are now on display as part of
the a collection in Bradford, England
Even
30+ years later it is still a potent symbol, though more for
partying than for peace these days.
A famous right-wing American
bumper sticker of the early 70s compared its shape to a bird's
foot and read "Footprint of the great American chicken".
Although specifically designed for the anti-nuclear movement,
the peace sign has quite deliberately never been copyrighted. No
one has to pay or to seek permission before they use it. A symbol
of freedom, it is free for all.
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