DESIGN THAT USES COLOURS TO FORM THE INFRASTRUCTURE OF JUSTICE.

How Jack Your Body began house music’s squelching electronic revolution

“It’s easy to forget how little people travelled back then; none of them had ever been to Britain or met anybody British before. Then there was the fact that there were white clubs and black clubs in Chicago, a segregated club culture, basically. I was always welcomed, but DJs couldn’t believe that clubs weren’t like that back in Britain.”

Face magazine’s Sheryl Garratt comments, in article on Steve ‘Silk’ Hurley on Jack Your Body Success 

The Guardian

Colour has always been a language of power — a way to mark belonging, difference, and defiance.

In design, colour forms the invisible infrastructure of justice: it builds systems of visibility, care, and collective identity.

Structures of shapes and stripes have effectively transformed personal expression into shared architectures of liberation. Each hue, a foundation stone in the ongoing constructions of equality as a continual, intersectional, inclusive with adaptive common shared belief, to give constant traction to compassion.

In these compassionate unions of colour we see a framework for how communities hold one another and the power to reimagine belonging through the colours that can summarise tribes, geography and homelands.

From vibrant, utopian, futurist, liberation colours to sepia tones of historic memory and endurance which reflect justices inability to exist without remembering what has been erased. Together, propose a new way to understand colour: not as surface, but as constructions of meaningful human stories.

They show that design can build the visual and emotional infrastructures of justice, a world constructed in full spectrum, where compassion, refuge, and pride coexist in every shade.