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Loading... A Bolshevik Posterby Stephen White
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Origins - Apsit and the early Soviet poster - Moor, Deni and the military-political poster - Bolshevik poster and after. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)741.67The arts Graphic arts and decorative arts Drawing & drawings Graphic design, illustration, commercial art Poster and Advertising DesignLC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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Stephen White was able to visit some of the best collections of Soviet posters in the USA, Europe and the Soviet Union. (One wonders what has become of the collections in Moscow that he visited.) He writes detailed accounts of the artists who worked on these posters and the ways in which they were used. Many of these posters were part of a series called "Windows"; they were produced by shock cadres of artists and printers who could react to the latest news from the war front and have hundreds of posters on the streets in a few hours' work. These would be fly-posted in any prominent location, and got their name of "Windows" because empty shops were an ideal target.
The period under review is very narrow, as after 1920 and the end of the civil war and the Russo-Polish War, the emphasis turned to posters on economic and social issues; also, a degree of central control began to be exercised rather than leaving the production to semi-autonomous agencies and cadres. Posters also had to compete with revived commercial posters as Lenin's "New Economic Policy" took hold, putting advertising posters back on the streets.
The author devotes a lot of space to analysing the artwork, themes and execution of the subjects, and comparing these with artistic themes of the period generally, He also describes some late revival of the specifically agitprop styles of poster during the Second World War (or 'Great Patriotic War' as it is known in Russia). A number of these posters echoed the spirit and form of the earlier, Bolshevik posters, though they were produced under very different conditions, both physical (improved materials) and political (the over-riding importance of the Stalinist cult of personality).
Anyone just wanting a collection of Russian posters will be perfectly happy with this book, although there is a lot of text in it. But reading that text will give a very detailed - but far from dry - account of the fervour of the artistic life in the turmoil of Bolshevik Russia. ( )