Jamie Lee Curtis wrote the foreword for an activism guide at the center of “The Art of Saving Democracy,” a new kit from People For the American Way. The kit combines original artwork and practical civic tools into a single physical package.
Curtis announced her involvement on Instagram by reposting from @tinypricksproject. That account has used art to engage with American politics for years.
The kit draws on work from 20 American artists. The roster includes Roy Lichtenstein, Shepard Fairey, Carrie Mae Weems, Vincent Valdez, and Deborah Kass. These names span several decades of American visual art. Some, like Shepard Fairey, have a long history of work designed for public spaces and political contexts. The full package includes 50 postcards, five mini posters, and four sheets of stickers. It also comes with 30 conversation starters.
The how-to guide is the most distinctive part. It walks through three civic skills: writing an opinion piece, presenting an argument to elected officials, and taking collective action. These are concrete and procedural. That’s a different contribution than a fundraising post or a signed letter. Structuring civic participation as a skill to be learned, rather than an identity to be performed, is a meaningful choice.
People For the American Way was founded by Norman Lear. Lear built his career producing television shows like “All in the Family” and “The Jeffersons.” He started the organization to fight bigotry and support creative expression. It has been active for more than four decades. All royalties from the kit go directly to People For the American Way.
The kit’s language is direct about its goals. The announcement Curtis reposted put it plainly: “Whether you’re taking to the streets or taking up a pen, The Art of Saving Democracy can help you be more effective when you express yourself, champion our shared rights and freedoms, and resist hate and authoritarianism.” People For the American Way has never positioned itself as a politically neutral organization. The honest question: does a kit like this reach new participants, or does it mainly serve people already engaged?
That’s the more useful question to sit with. Curtis has been publicly vocal on civic issues before. Writing a foreword is a more substantive act than attaching one’s name to a cause. A foreword makes an argument. It commits the writer to a position on the page.
The physical format also reflects a specific theory of participation. The postcards are sized for voter outreach campaigns. The mini posters are made for store windows and community bulletin boards. The stickers are designed for public visibility. These are objects built for shared spaces rather than private feeds.
People For the American Way is presenting this as a transfer of institutional knowledge. The goal is to translate forty years of advocacy experience into something a first-time activist can pick up and use. The how-to sections on opinion writing and lobbying are the clearest expression of that goal.
Curtis’s role is discrete: she wrote the foreword. The kit is the larger project. Both are worth understanding on their own terms.






























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