Social Practice · Web Design · Culture Jamming
HP Concert
Series
A provocative campaign-site artifact that makes a fictional neighborhood concert feel official at first glance, then uses disclosure, satire, and process documentation to turn the discomfort into a critique of public image and mental-health visibility.
Overview
Designing a believable fiction without letting it become a lie.
HP Concert Series is a social-practice art and web project staged as an unsettlingly convincing community concert announcement in Highland Park, Texas. The project uses the premise of a fictional John Hinckley Jr. acoustic concert to examine how affluent neighborhoods manage discomfort, mental health, public disturbance, notoriety, and reputation.
The site had to do two opposing things at the same time: look official enough that the satire could function, and disclose clearly enough that the project never turned into misinformation. That tension is the point. The homepage opens with familiar event-site language — date, time, venue, free tickets, poster gallery — then immediately corrects the frame: no actual performance will take place, no tickets are being sold, and the project does not endorse violence or notoriety.
Official enough to be uncomfortable. Clear enough to be responsible.
The core design constraintThe strongest part of the project is not the shock premise. It is the system built around that premise: a poster campaign, a homepage, a process page, a gallery of documentation, an FAQ, neighborhood article cards, an artist statement, and a repeated ethical disclaimer that keeps the work legible as satire and research rather than promotion.
The Brief
A campaign site for a concert that cannot actually exist.
The fictional event format was chosen because concert posters are ordinary. They are friendly, routine, and easy to ignore. By inserting a deeply uncomfortable name into that familiar format, the project forces the viewer to examine the exact moment when a polished civic object becomes socially unacceptable.
The web brief was not simply “make a fake event page.” It was more specific: build a public-facing artifact that could sit beside real event pages, use the grammar of legitimate local promotion, then reveal itself as an art project about the anxiety that the artifact produces.
Information Architecture
The site is structured like a believable event, then slowly reveals the project underneath it.
The navigation is intentionally simple: Event, Articles, About, Why Highland Park?, FAQ, and HOW? Those labels do not announce themselves as “art school.” They use the same straightforward categories a local promotion site would use. That restraint is what lets the concept work. The more ordinary the interface feels, the more effective the conceptual break becomes when the user reads the disclosure text.
Homepage architecture
The event grammar: performer name, date, time, venue, ticket status, CTA buttons, poster gallery, and quick event details. This is the believable shell.
The art-project grammar: no-performance notice, mental-health framing, Highland Park critique, FAQ clarification, and links to the process documentation. This is the ethical reveal.
The article cards
The neighborhood dispatches expand the world of the project beyond one poster. They turn HP Concert Series into a satirical local-media ecosystem: celebrity holidays, culture-war recycling panic, boring mansion roasts, book-ban escalation, counter-pride events, and fictional letters from anxious residents. The cards are funny, but they also establish a consistent target: neighborhood image control, moral panic, and the theater of local respectability.
Visual System
Dark civic minimalism with one fluorescent warning label.
The visual language borrows from concert promotion, municipal event pages, and prestige-neighborhood branding. It is clean, dark, and controlled. The typography is severe. The layout is grid-based. The color palette uses black, smoky brown, muted rust, and a sharp green accent that reads like both ticketing language and hazard tape.
The strongest design decision is the restraint. A weaker version of this project would scream “fake” immediately. This version lets the viewer enter through familiar interface patterns before the text reframes the experience. The site does not rely on chaotic visual jokes. It uses polish as the joke.
The design had to be credible, not flashy.
The point was not to make a parody page that looks obviously fake. The point was to make something that carries the visual confidence of a real neighborhood event announcement, then make that confidence uncomfortable. That is why the poster grid, venue block, CTA labels, and footer information matter: they are not filler. They are the camouflage.
Culture-Jamming Strategy
Subvertising, détournement, media critique, and persona work — handled as design, not just content.
The HOW page names the project’s working methods directly: subvertising, détournement, media hijacking, satirical critique, persona manipulation, public intervention, simulation, and signal exploitation. For the case study, the important move is to treat those not as buzzwords, but as interaction-design decisions.
Ethical Design
The disclaimers are not legal cleanup. They are part of the artwork.
Because the premise uses a real person associated with political violence and public notoriety, the project’s ethical frame has to be visible and repeated. The site does this correctly. It states that the concert is not real, no performance has been booked, no tickets are being sold, and the project does not support or endorse Hinckley, his past actions, or political violence.
Those clarifications are not peripheral. They are the guardrails that allow the work to function. Without them, the project becomes misinformation. With them, the viewer has to confront a different question: why did the polished event format feel plausible before the correction?
A fictional concert involving a notorious public figure could be read as endorsement, threat, or misinformation if the page withheld context or buried the clarification.
The page uses repeated public disclosure, an FAQ, an artist statement, and process documentation to make the project’s intent visible without neutralizing the discomfort.
Process
From poster premise to documented public artifact.
The process page turns the project from a single stunt into a documented design system. It describes ideation, poster creation, website development, Instagram extension, flyer distribution at the Snider Plaza Tree Lighting, a fabricated concerned-neighbor persona, a Nextdoor-style alert, media outreach, and a response from a major news outlet. The case study does not need to reproduce the mechanics of that intervention; it needs to show that the final website is the archive that makes the intervention legible afterward.
1. Concept pressure test
The premise had to be uncomfortable enough to expose the neighborhood’s image-management reflexes, but legible enough that the audience could understand the critique once the disclosure appeared.
2. Poster system
The poster set established the project’s visual authority: event hierarchy, public-location language, date/time blocks, and a design tone that felt routine instead of exaggerated.
3. Website build
The site gave the project a central source of truth: event details, project explanation, FAQ, article cards, and later a HOW page documenting what happened.
4. Social and public extension
Instagram, flyers, and neighborhood-language framing moved the project beyond a screen, making the website feel like part of a larger public campaign.
5. Documentation archive
The HOW page collects screenshots, video, gallery material, and interview audio so the work can be evaluated as a complete multimedia project rather than a rumor.
What Works
The project succeeds because the web design understands the social design.
Worth Improving
Where the project could become even stronger as a portfolio piece.
The current site already does the hard conceptual work. The next layer would be polish and evidentiary structure: clearer artifact labels, stronger metadata, a more formal archive index, and a public-facing explanation of the ethics behind fictional public interventions.
Takeaways
A portfolio project about interface trust.
HP Concert Series is not just a provocative poster project. It is a study in how interface trust gets manufactured. A clean site, a plausible venue, a neat date block, a green ticket label, and a poster gallery can make a fiction feel administratively real. The project uses that trust, then breaks it open.
That is why this belongs in a design portfolio. It shows visual identity, campaign thinking, web structure, copywriting, multimedia documentation, and social-practice strategy. More importantly, it shows that a website is never just a container for information. It is an authority machine. This project turns that machine into the subject.
The question this project answers.
How do you build a fictional public artifact that is convincing enough to reveal something true, while being transparent enough not to become the thing it is critiquing?