Just a few weeks after Gov. Andrew Cuomo unveiled his giant Styrofoam coronavirus mountain, the governor revealed his latest creative endeavor on Monday, a poster celebrating New York’s triumphs in the battle against COVID-19.
“I love history,” Cuomo said during the press briefing. “I love poster art.”
High res image here. pic.twitter.com/4EitwxlKCj
— Rich Azzopardi (@RichAzzopardi) July 13, 2020
This is the third poster commissioned by the governor that has been inspired by poster art from the late 1800s and early 1900s. In January, Cuomo unveiled his poster called “A Visual Representation of New York in 2020” to commemorate his State of the State speech. And in 2012, he revealed a similarly stylized poster to celebrate his accomplishments.
The coronavirus-related poster received mixed reviews, while some were tickled by the unusual work of art, others found it failed to capture the severity of the crisis and made light of the tragedies endured by many New Yorkers. Some also pointed out that the poster failed to capture the governor’s failures during the height of the crisis, such as the extremely high number of coronavirus deaths at nursing homes.
As a professional editorial cartoonist, I am genuinely delighted by Cuomo's bizarre new poster about Covid-19. https://t.co/gQHeNrWUmP
— Bill Roundy (@bartoonist) July 13, 2020
We're no longer issuing press releases on behalf of clients, just Cuomo posters from now on. Seems to be the thing to do.
— Andrew Rush (@TheAndrewRush) July 13, 2020
Cuomo taking a victory lap with a poster sale is so insane.
— Josh Jordan (@NumbersMuncher) July 14, 2020
He sent COVID-19 patients to nursing homes and didn't give the subways a deep clean until months after the outbreak.
New York has more deaths per 1M than every state except NJ.
I feel like I'm taking crazy pills. https://t.co/mQxc3sVMjY
(This is the poster sales thing I'm referring to:) https://t.co/1vmtkfi9Fe
— Jake Tapper (@jaketapper) July 14, 2020
All of the governor’s posters are known for being extremely symbolic and this poster is no different. We’ve pulled out some of the key details in Cuomo’s latest poster to help you better understand the governor’s artistic and political vision of the state.
The man on the moon
President Donald Trump is depicted as “the man on the moon,” a phrase that typically insinuates that someone is out of touch with reality. “It’s just the flu” is written below the president. Trump has frequently said that in reference to COVID-19, which many public health experts – and Cuomo – have pointed out is an inaccurate comparison.
“The sun is on the other side of the mountain,” Cuomo said. “We just have to make it to the other side of the mountain.”
The mountain
The governor has continuously used “the mountain” to symbolize the hurdles that the state has overcome during the pandemic. The center of the poster depicts a mountain that looks nearly identical to the forest green foam prop Cuomo unveiled a couple weeks ago.
“Over the past few years, I’ve done my own posters that capture that feeling,” Cuomo said. “I did a new one for what we went through with COVID, and I think the general shape is familiar to you. We went up the mountain. We curved the mountain. We came down the other side, and these are little telltale signs that, to me, represent what was going on.”
Economy Falls
Running diagonally over the mountain is “Economy Falls,” a reference to the crushing impact that the state’s coronavirus crisis has had on the economy. “We almost get to the top of the mountain – ‘Economy Falls.’ Get it? Economy Falls like Niagara Falls but then the economy drops, the economy falls,” Cuomo said.
111 Days of Hell
Located in the middle of the mountain is “111 Days of Hell,” a reference to the most horrific and virus-plagued days that the state experienced during the COVID-19 outbreak. The governor held press conferences for 111 consecutive days during the pandemic.
Hand sanitizer
On the bottom-left side of the mountain is a bottle of New York state hand sanitizer, which was produced by the state at the onset of the outbreak, after hand sanitizer became scarce.However, the hand sanitizer became controversial when it was discovered that the state’s prisoners were just bottling sanitizer that was produced elsewhere.
Press briefing table
At the bottom of the mountain is a press briefing table, which has “Dr. Knows Best,”
“Smiling Rob,” “56” and “Magnificent Melissa” seated at it. Those nicknames refer to state Health Commissioner Dr. Howard Zucker, state Budget Director Robert Mujica, Cuomo and Secretary to the Governor Melissa DeRosa, respectively.
A.J. Parkinson quote
The saying, “Tell the people the truth and they will do the right thing,” by A.J. Parkinson is written on the right side of the mountain. Parkinson is a fake philosopher and poet who was often citedby Cuomo’s father, former Gov. Mario Cuomo, and has become something of an inside joke. Cuomo has also quoted Parkinson at coronavirus press briefingsas a nod to his father.
The rope
A long, golden rope hovers above the mountain and is being pulled down the right side by New Yorkers, health care workers, essential workers, out of state volunteers, Cuomo’s three daughters and his dog, Captain. Above the rope on the left side of the mountain, “Pulling down the curve together” is written and the right side says, “The power of ‘We.’”
This appears to depict the hard work that was done by various individuals within the state who helped contain the virus. However, it does seem unfair for Cuomo’s daughters and his dog to be given the same amount of credit as health care and essential workers in flattening the COVID-19 curve.
Boyfriend Cliff
On the right side of the mountain is the “Boyfriend Cliff,” which is presumably a nod to the boyfriend of Cuomo’s daughter Mariah Kennedy-Cuomo, who sheltered with the governor and his family during the public health crisis.
Some pointed out that Cuomo took poking fun at Kennedy-Cuomo’s boyfriend to the extreme.
the "Boyfriend Cliff" is when you date one of Cuomo's daughters and he doesn't like it so he draws you dying on a public poster pic.twitter.com/Ubq8m17veZ
— Katie Sicking (@KatieSicking) July 13, 2020
"Trump's COVID-19 scandal makes Nixon's Watergate scandal look innocent. Nobody died in the Watergate scandal"--@NYGovCuomo pic.twitter.com/T2HAnQE9J9
— Elizabeth Kuster (@bethmonster) July 13, 2020
Rainbow
The rainbow above the mountain appears to be a nod to the state legalizing same-sex marriage in 2011, another symbol that was previously seen on Cuomo’s State of the State poster.
Sea of Division
Cuomo’s State of the State poster depicted a ship sailing through the “Sea of Division” to symbolize the accomplishments that New York had made during his three terms in office. The sea can also be spotted in the bottom-right corner of the governor’s new poster, presumably meant as a criticism of how divided the country has become when it comes to tackling the current public health crisis.
Octopus
The octopus in the lower-left corner of the poster is a symbol that previously appeared in Cuomo’s State of the State poster as an homage to William Jennings Bryan, a three-time Democratic presidential candidate whose posters inspired Cuomo’s. Above the octopus is a cruise ship, which is most likely a reference to the notable COVID-19 outbreaks that occurred on cruise ships.
NEXT STORY: America’s favorite governor has made some new enemies