Prison Nation: Posters on the Prison Industrial Complex

The United States has the largest prison population in the world-over 2.3 million inmates. Since the 1970s, the rate of most serious crimes has dropped or remained stagnant, yet prisons have been filled at double capacity. People of color, the poor, the illiterate, the mentally ill, youth, and women are the primary occupants. This phenomenal growth is due to mandatory drug sentencing laws, conspiracy provisions, a dysfunctional parole system, inadequate legal representation, and huge profits made by the multinational corporations servicing the prisons. The posters in Prison Nation cover many of the critical issues surrounding the system of mass incarceration including: the racial disparity in sentencing, the death penalty, the Three Strikes law, women’s right to self defense, access to education and health care, the growing rate of incarceration, slave labor, divestment, privatization, torture, and re-entry into the community. They show the power of art to educate and inspire.

This online exhibition has been made possible with support from The Andy Warhol Foundation; Department of Cultural Affairs, City of Los Angeles; The James Irvine Foundation; The Getty Foundation; The Los Angeles County Arts Commission; and The John Randolph Haynes and Dora Haynes Foundation.

This exhibition is available in full and organized in sections. Link to the beginning of each section below. To return to beginning, click here.

Click here to see the full list of CSPG Exhibition History.
Link back to list of CSPG exhibitions.
Link here to go to Prison Nation Gallery Guide.

Part I. Bars & Stripes Part VI. Women and Mothers Behind Bars
Part II. Legalized Slavery Part VII. Cruel & Unusual
Part III. Prison Boom Part VIII. Dead Wrong - Capital Punishment
Part IV. Education Not Incarceration Part IX. Democracy Denied
Part V. Youth And Incaration Part X. Challenging The Pic