Trump's signature in Bacher's untitled San Francisco show

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Thu, 10 Aug 2017 - 07:48 GMT

BY

Thu, 10 Aug 2017 - 07:48 GMT

photo of Installation view of Lutz Bacher’s untitled work in San Francisco photo file

photo of Installation view of Lutz Bacher’s untitled work in San Francisco photo file

CAIRO – 10 August 2017: The Pseudonymous artist, Lutz Bacher, weirdly plays with a maximized image of Trump’s Signature in Superb San Francisco Show, a typically Bacher way to convey a message.

Graphologists say that handwriting and signatures are one of the biggest defining elements of individuality. They can be used to determine personality traits and defects. They reveal much to the critical eye as to what kind of person you are.

U.S. President Donald Trump owns one of the most powerful signatures in the world, with special traits that tell more about his character.

“His signature transmits wild ambition, dynamism, bravery and fearlessness," said Tracey Trussell of the British Institute of Graphologists after analyzing Trump’s handwriting.

According to Trussel, the "large writing, upright slant and long tall letters” indicate "determination and stubbornness" in "a tough negotiator and a hard liner."

Trump’s announcements and stances, including building a barrier between the U.S. and Mexico, banning Muslims from entering the U.S. and calling for Hillary Clinton’s imprisonment, all match his character according the analysis of his handwriting.

On second thoughts, Trussel touched upon a surprising trait that characterizes Trump’s handwriting: flexibility. "There is a sign in Mr. Trump's handwriting of flexibility; he's not quite as inflexible potentially as people think," pointed out Trussel in her analysis of the long, tall letters of Trump’s signature.

Over the walls of a gallery in San Francisco, Lutz Bacher expressed a rather similar opinion. She was more obsessed with showing Trump’s handwriting as monstrous and of a seismograph-like shape.

Filling the room with Trump handwriting, Bacher let the signature flow along about 110 feet of paper affixed to the gallery’s walls, drawing the attention to the threat behind Trump’s approvals and signed decisions.

Bacher confessed that she is not much of a handwriting analyst, yet she intentionally maximized the lines cutting up and down with sharp angles in a compressed and jagged style, saying it fits a person of mercurial mood swings who cannot be predictable.

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