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Soviet Propaganda. The Bolshevik Era (1917-1921). Lenin emphasized the use of “agitprop”. This was a combination of propaganda and agitation in order to win the support of both the intellectuals and average worker Struggle of Ideology, battle from within
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The Bolshevik Era (1917-1921) • Lenin emphasized the use of “agitprop”. This was a combination of propaganda and agitation in order to win the support of both the intellectuals and average worker • Struggle of Ideology, battle from within • Over 3,600 posters were created during this time • As The Civil War intensified in 1919, the Bolsheviks set up a new Literary-Publishing Department to coordinate propaganda efforts. • Dimitri Moor and Viktor Deni were the main cartoonists of the era. • Russian Telegraph Agency (ROSTA) • Stenciled posters that summarized the news. • Displayed in shop windows across Moscow. • Era ended when Bolsheviks defeated the Whites.
Cossack - Who are you with, them or us?, 1920 Never buy in a Private Shop - when you can buy in a cooperative, Universal War Training Education is the Key to Victory. The worker's hand is powerful with a rifle a, c.1919 Rosta Window #216 (No Bureaucracy) - 8 panels, 1921 Only the Red Army can bring peace to your farms and villages. Peasants, join your workers' and peasants’, 1920
The New Economic Policy (1921-1927) • Small farms and businesses flourished, while the State kept control of heavy industry, transport and foreign trade. • “Roaring Twenties” of Russia. • Mayakovsky and Rodchenko known as "advertising constructors" for State-run businesses. They developed an ‘agitational’ style of advertising in which shrill slogans and aggressive compositions were used with strong diagonals and color • became the peacetime equivalent of the revolutionary poster. • State poster production was headed by Yakov Ruklevsky • Other Famous Artists • Stenberg brothers, Georgii and Vladimir • Nikolai Prusakov • Mikhail Dlugach who created more than 500 posters
Sailors- Buy in the Cooperatives, 1925 The Horror of Future War, 1924 No Knowledge=No Bread. Knowledge Lies in Books. Books are on the Cooperatives., 1925 Be ready to defend October, 1927
The First and Second Five Year Plans (1928-1937) • First Five Year plan • Upon assuming complete control in 1928, Stalin immediately put an end to the New Economic Policy and embarked on a new course to full communism with the Five Year Plan. Intended to turn the USSR rapidly into a powerful industrial nation. Stalin demanded an increase in production and wide scale construction • Created strictly controlled propaganda • Posters appeared everywhere, in factories, farms and all public spaces, in vast quantities and variety • Messages of Propaganda: ": fulfill the plan, exceed quotas, defend the USSR” • Master of this message was Gustav Klutsis • Used mostly red and black All designed to stress the monumental and heroic aspect of the age. • His propaganda attacked the enemies of the State both within and without, always portraying the Soviet Union as the victor of peace and social justice • Second Five Year Plan • Beginning in 1934, Stalin embarked on a thorough purge of the Party, then the army. Anyone remotely suspected of opposition or even lack of enthusiasm was exiled to the camps or shot • Purges claimed the lives of many artists even Gustav Klutsis • Literature, art and posters of this period overwhelmingly stressed the role of the infallible Leader, Joseph Stalin. • Terror, drove out originality and spontaneity in not only propaganda, but in art until the death of Stalin in 1953
Greeting to those who have joined the work at the world-wide giant Dneprostroi DGES (Dnieper Hydroelectirc Dam), 1932 A Country should know its Heroes, c.1930 The Komsomol Fleet greets the great Stalin!, 1939 Marx, Engels, Lenin and Stalin, 1936
The Great Patriotic War (1939 - 1945) • The forces unleashed in the crisis of the Civil War were rekindled, and Soviet artists rose to the challenge. • The themes of Soviet propaganda shifted dramatically as the threat of the Nazis grew. Patriotic themes began to overshadow communism and class struggle. • Speeches and posters were populated by references to great pre-Soviet heroes. • Two most famous phrases, both by Moor. • “How have you helped the Front” • “Have you enrolled as a volunteer”.
Liberate them!, 1942 Liberate!, 1942 How have you Helped the Front?, 1941 A blow to the enemy. There will be a celebration even on our street., 1944 Let's give a hand of brotherly help to the inhabitants of villages and towns freed from the fascists, 1942
The Cold War (1946 - 1984) • Return of “Social Realism” and other Utopian Views • Up until his death in 1953, posters focused on the glory of Stalin • The middle years of the Cold War depicted the Vietnam War and the great strides taken in the Space Race • Denounced the aims and goals of Capitalism, viewed as the main threat of communism • Denounced religion as a threat to the communist ideals • 12,000 churches closed by Krushchev in 1959
Under Lenin's banner, with Stalin's leadership - ahead toward Communism, 1948 Religious rites - Young and old, Tear these strings!, c. 1966 The Republic of the Free - The Hammer & Sickle forever forge the shield, 1966 Pledge to the Motherland and Communist Ideas, 1978 Stop U.S. Agression in Vietnam, 1974