James Victore
James Victore is an American artist, art director, graphic designer, and author. He is best known for his direct political posters that use hand-painted lettering and loose handwriting. Victore has taught at SVA in New York and has written a number of books on graphic design.
Biography
Victore was born in 1962 and grew up on an air force base in Plattsburgh, New York in a family of a career airman and a college librarian. He studied at Plattsburgh State College for one year before dropping out and moving to New York City to attend SVA. Victore did not graduate from SVA either, and considers himself self-taught. His early jobs included designing restaurant menus, greeting cards, CD and book covers. He apprenticed for book cover designer Paul Bacon.In 1992, Victore joined graphic designers John Gall, Leah Lococo, Morris Taub, Susan Walsh, and Steven Brower to form a design group under the name "Post No Bills" to produce political posters ahead of the 1992 Presidential election. In 1993, in response to race riots in Crown Heights, Brooklyn, Victore created a poster titled "Racism" that became one of his most famous works and was acquired by the New York Museum of Modern Art and Denver Art Museum.
As of 2025, Victore lives in Texas, outside of Austin.