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Wednesday, July 23, 2008
Power To The People
Posted by Steve
Power To The People
does not reprise the mantra of the Sixties, at least not in this post. It is the title of a remarkable book of early Soviet propaganda posters from
The Israel Museum in Jerusalem
and edited by Alex Ward of
the Merrill C. Berman Collection
. Specifically, these are the stenciled
ROSTA
(Russian Telegraph Agency) window posters that hung in the telegraph storefronts from 1919 to 1921, just after the Russian Revolution of 1917. They owe a debt to American comics, but rather than strictly entertainment, the posters told stories that both cautioned and roused the populace about everyday concerns: "
agitprop.
" One of the principal authors of ROSTA posters was the poet
Vladimir Mayakovsky
.
For those interested in political graphics, the Russian Revolution, or just the origins of stencil art (
not related to hip-hop or skateboarding
), this splendidly produced book collects more of these limited and fragile ROSTAs in one place than anywhere else.
Books
|
Comics
|
Museums
|
Propaganda
|
Street Art
7/23/2008 7:00:58 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
Comments [2]
7/24/2008 2:31:42 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
You may be interested to know there is a film about Mayakovsky out on DVD shot entirely n location in Moscow. For more information see www.copernicusfilms.narod.ru
Michael Craig
|
copernicusfilmsAT NOSPAMyahoo dot co dot uk
7/25/2008 10:59:55 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
For more examples of political propaganda materials (and a whole lot of other great design stuff!), check out The Wolfsonian (www.wolfsonian.org – a museum in Miami Beach with a diverse collection of objects from the modern era (1885-1945)focusing on how art and design shape and reflect the human experience.
Tim Morawetz
|
timAT NOSPAMglue-to dot com
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