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Blog posts of '2024' 'May'

Soviet Era Posters
Soviet Era Posters

We will see how Soviet era propaganda posters re-emerged powerfully in the 1930s following the extensive circulation during the Civil War. We will explore what is referred to as iconography of Soviet poster art.

Here are the other 2 parts of the series:

Here are our most popular Soviet poster categories:

Cold War posters poster communism poster Stalin
Cold War posters Communism propaganda posters Stalin posters
Poster Lenin soviet space race propaganda alcohol soviet anti alcohol posters
Lenin posters Soviet space propaganda posters Soviet anti drinking posters

The Five Year Plan and Re-emergence of Soviet Era Posters

Following the success in the Civil War the Bolsheviks reduced the spread of Soviet era propaganda posters that so far had reached circulation of almost 10 million in total. The New Economic Policy (proposed by Lenin in 1921) placed increased emphasis on the written and spoken word and the role of radio and the Bolshevik press gained more prominence. This trend reveresed by the time of the adoption of the First Five Year Plan in 1928. Soviet era propaganda posters were again in fashion.   

Printing Soviet era propaganda posters at a printing shop, USSR Radio overtook sovieta era posters as means of propaganda in the 1920s
Printing press in USSR, 1923, Ogonek magazine Professor Bruevich in his laboratory for R&D of radio transmission technologies, 1923, Ogonek magazine

The onset of the First Five Year Plan reversed the decrease in circultion and prominence of the political poster medium. Other forms of visual propaganda also gained momentum. Political visual art once again became central in the party's strategy of mobilising society on a grand scale and project the messaging the Bolsheviks needed to reach the masses. They would use poster propaganda again to implement their vision of the Soviet man as an individual and as part of the social and political fabric.

The Soviet leaders knew that transformation of mass consciousness at the scale required will need extraordinary approaches being taken. The old/traditional ways of thinking were deeply ingrained and hard to influence. New posters were produced to address the new needs of the party, this time around in the era of farm collectivisation and mass industrialisation.

Third year of the  five year plan, magazine article
Article on the beginning of the third year of The Five Year Plan, source Ogonek magazine

 

Soviet Era Propaganda Posters in the 1930s

In the 1930s visual propaganda gradually became more prevelant and extensive. The Art Department of the USSR was now supervising all Soviet era poster production. The State established Publishing house (Izogiz) that was run under the direct supervision of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. Therefore the poster topics, texts and imagery were dropped to the artists from above and supervised by state censors. Centralisation of party control over the production of posters increased as the volumes printed and disseminated expaned dramatically.

Due to the variety of collectives producing Soviet era posters during the Civil War there were many more designs. An individual poster design would usually not exceed circulation of 25-30 thousand. In the 1930s, with the centralisation of the creative process, some of the posters (seen as important) would be printed from 100 to 250 thousand copies each. Be it in cities and towns or the countryside, on factory floors and collectivised farms, private homes and in schools, virtually every Soviet citizen was confronted with imagery that was essentially there to indoctrinate them in the new world they lived in and motivate them in their work.    

The Great Patriotic War

The Second World War marked another period of large scale societal, military and economic mobilisation. The nation was in a mortal struggle and being so vast and populous it had to be mobilised rapidly, extensively and efficiently. The State turned to visual propaganda once again. Soviet WWII posters were circulated in vast volumes all across the country. Many themes of Tsarist Russia's World War I poster art were reused and redeployed.

Stalinist Propaganda Posters

Following WWII a period of so called High Stalinism (1946- 1953) took place in USSR. Visual propaganda turned more mythical than ever and vision of Socialist society and life bordering a paradise was projected into the public mind. Socialist realism, a visual art genre that is direct and understandable by any social strata, was employed for this goal.  

Soviet era propaganda posters from 1930s and 1940s
Soviet Propaganda posters from the 1930s and 1940s

How Propaganda Posters Changed Over Time

By the 1930s many poster artists aimed at creating a new, specifically proletarian culture. The challenge was that artists needed to be able to speak the language of the ordinary Soviet citizen. Therefore they had to use the right images, symbols and styles that their audiences could grasp. Therefore this new message had to draw and formulate art based on pre-existing forms and vocabularies. 

According to Hobsbawm the approach was to seek well known historical material and use it to create invented traditions that carried new meaning for novel purposes. Such material is accumulated over time in every society and such familiar langugage of symbolic practice and communication could be easily identified and exploited.  

Sources of Inspiration for Poster Artists

For inspiration propaganda artists explored the rich Russian tradition (among others), here are some of the sources they utilised:

  • commercial advertising,
  • fine arts,
  • religious and folk art,
  • classical mythology,
  • the imagery of Western European labor and revolutionary movements,
  • and political art of the tsarist era

They would use different sources and elements at different periods. A special visual language was created from the amalgamation of the elements of these sources. Therefore, combining political ideology with mythology made Soviet visual propaganda particularly unique and enthralling.  

Political Iconography

Early on Soviet propagandists amalgamated imagery that combined traditional art and the new very particular expressiveness of the Bolshevik message. These novel images were divided into heroes (saints) and enemies (the devil and daemons) and standardised into icon-like art that had a fixed pattern (or the "podlinnik" in Orthodox religious art). Instead of existing old time institutions and relations in society these new icons presented a new system of signs imposed by the Soviet state on the people to transform the consciousness of the masses across the nation. Similarly to other invented traditions in other societies these image-icons were transmitted consistently and repetetively to their audiences and resonated strongly due to their inspiration being sourced from existing mythologies from the Russian past and tradition.  

In Part IV of this series we will look into 3 different categories of iconographic Soviet era propaganda posters:

  1. The Icon of the Worker - posters of workers were at the core of Bolshevik ideology. In Marxism-Leninism ideology the proletariat were the chosen people and idealised. With the iconography of the workers the Soviets aimed at asserting their continuity with the past and their ideological vision for the future;
  2. Iconography of Women - Soviet women posters evolved over time. In the beginning women were presented as subordinate to workers and peasants and didn't belong to the league of Soviet heroes at the time. Later on, particularly during collectivisation, women were elevated in status;
  3. Icon of the Leader (the “Vozhd”) - Stalin posters and Lenin posters as expected idealised the leaders into semi-gods according to their personality cults but also as symbols and examples of the new Soviet man;
Women-at-a-committee-meeting-Soviet-village-in-the-1930s Workers soviet factory
Women at a local committee meeting in a Soviet village, 1930s, Ogonek magazine Workers at a Soviet factory floor during inspection, 1930s, Ogonek magazine

This text is largely based on Iconography of Power: Soviet Political Posters under Lenin and Stalin (Volume 27) First Edition by Victoria E. Bonnell. You can find it on Amazon from this link.

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The Soviet Union Poster
The Soviet Union Poster

We will explore why the Bolsheviks picked Soviet Union posters as a main propaganda tool.

Here are the other 2 parts of the series:

Here are our most popular Soviet poster categories:

Cold War posters poster communism poster Stalin
Cold War posters Communism propaganda posters Stalin posters
Poster Lenin soviet space race propaganda alcohol soviet anti alcohol posters
Lenin posters Soviet space propaganda posters Soviet anti drinking posters

Posters of Soviet Union - Best Tool For the Job

Around the time of the October Revolution most Russians were still illiterate. Particularly so in the countryside outside of the medium and large towns and cities. There isn't statistical data available for 1917 but in the beginning of the century, according to national cencsus, 83 percent of the rural population and 55 percent of the urban population was illiterate

In response the Soviet government launched an extensive literacy campaign under the name Likbez or short for "liquidation of illiteracy". Although successful by 1926 half of the countryside and one fifth of the town and city dwellers still didn't have basic literacy skills. Furthermore being literate in many cases was applied quite liberally - a second or  third grader today would have fallein in this category.

Soviet Union Poster Art Emerges as an Alternative to Written Text

Therefore at the time of the First Five Year Plan a very sizeable part of the population, particularly so the peasants, couldn't read basic texts, like newspapers or even pamphlets. Visual propaganda, which substantially eliminated the need of text, was a very attractive if not the only option to Soviet propagandists who wanted to reach the broadest strata of the population with their messaging. Posters were attention grabbing, easy to interpret and could be repetitive with new ones printed regularly.

Before posters USSR - Peasants reads newspaper Pravda Soviet peasants
Peasant from a village reading Pravda newspaper to his family and friends, 1920s Russian peasants

The Orthodox Icon - Unlikely Precursor of the Poster of the Soviet Union

In the Orthodox tradition and before that the archaic pageantry visual images had a central role. This provided for the highly visual traditional culture of the Russian Orthodox Church. The Orthodox icon has a very special place in this traditional culture.

Leonid Ouspensky in his study of icons notes that while Byzantium's theology was using mainly words, the Russian theology used imagery. For the Orthodox man "the holy image, just like the Holy Scriptures, transmits not human ideas and conceptions of truth, but truth itself - the Divine revelation". The imagery itself had magical powers for the Orthodox believer. For example, the power of saints was believed to be contained within icons. In time of need people would rely on icons for divine intervention and special blessings. 

Icons were so widespread that nearly every peasant and many urban homes had at least one. Therefore Russians were accustomed to this type of imagery and also believed in its sacredness. 

Soviet union poster precursor - the Russian orthodox icon
Orthodox icons: Russian Orthodox visual tradition paved the way for the prevalence of Soviet Union poster art

Propaganda Posters Are the Solution for the Bolsheviks

Therefore the Bolsheviks realised the value of imagery in communicating their messaging to the ordinary folk. Lenin's wife Nadezhda Krupskaya was in agreement with her fellow Commnist party members when in 1923 she said: "Only by visual imagery example can a villager be able to learn how to improve his productivity, at least in the coming years. Peasants, like most workers, think in images rather than abstractions and the written word. Even when we reach high levels of literacy the visual imagery will still be of great importance." 

The Economy and Its Role in the Rise of Poster Art

During those times following the Bolshevik Revolution and the Civil War (1918-1921) the economy was in tatters. There wasn't enough supply of paper, printing factories were being closed, often there were breakdowns etc. Therefore heavy reliance on printed mass media was impossible. The Party turned to visual propaganda and political posters. You could reach more people by hanging posters at the village square or train station instead of realying on a scarce circulation of a few newspapers to hundreds of people.   

The Party Newspaper Pravda - Circulation in Numbers

The main party organ of the Communist party was Pravda. It had a circilation of about 138'000 copies for the whole country of 140 million people Even if you assume that one person read to others that was very unsufficient. One poster on the other hand could reach hundreds of people depending on placement (at the collective farm, factory, town or village square, train station etc.).

Lecture Soviet journalists Printing factory in Soviet Russia
Lecture at the Petrograd school of journalism, 1918, source Ogonek magazine  Printing press in USSR, 1923, Ogonek magazine

Printing Presses In Overdrive

There fore propaganda posters placed in public spaces returned much better value on investment than newspapers and other means. They used less paper and ink to reach wider audiences. It's not entirely clear why (beyond the reasons we've already listed) but the Bolsheviks put extreme importance in propaganda with visual imagery during the Civil War (1918-1921).  

Posters of the Soviet Union - Production in Numbers

As the Civil War was beginning in August of 1918 the first political posters started appearing. More than 450 different institutions and organisations would produce over 3100 posters in the next three years. Enormous volumes of posters went into circulation.

  • Litizdat (the state publishing house), a major producer working under the Political Directorate of the Revolutionary Military Council of the Russian Union of Federated Socialist Republics (RSFSR) issued a total of 7.5 million posters but also postcards and lubok pictures in the next three years
  • Gosizdat (another state publisher) was found in 1919 and printed 3.2 million copies of 75 posters of the Soviet Union. 
  • The Rosta (Russian Telegraph Agency) print shops in Petrograd, Moscow and other cities printed out a novel form of poster combining newspaper, magazine and info bulletin. Rosta alone delivered over two million posters during the Civil War

Propaganda posters were everywhere. They had different colours, designs and creative imagery - posters enlivened an otherwise grey society. As American journalist Albert Rhys Williams noted in 1923, a visitor to Russia is struck by the variety of posters on public squares, factories and military barracks, on walls everywhere, train carriages and telegraph and electricity poles. They are everywhere! 

The 12th Congress of the Russian Communist Party (Bolsheviks) was held during 17–25 April 1923 in Moscow Soviet citizens reading public announcements
The 12th Congress of the Russian Communist Party (Bolsheviks) was held during 17–25 April 1923 in Moscow. The congress elected the 12th Central Committee. It was attended by 825 delgates, representing 386000 party members Citizens of Petrograd read the latest decree posters, 1918, source Ogonek magazine

Never had before the poster art form been used in such vast volumes. The party and its apparatchiks at all levels were committed to reeducating, inspiring and ultimately shaping the perception of the world and history of the Russian proletariat. As by far more people lived in villages and were uneducated and illiterate visual messaging was key for the ability of the Bolsheviks to reach out to them with a strong message. As the Civil War was raging they badly needed to have the people on their side. The poster of the Soviet Union was a key tool in their epic fight to the death with the Whites. It will remain important in the later years as they were implementing their rule and plans for the USSR and its people.  

This text is largely based on Iconography of Power: Soviet Political Posters under Lenin and Stalin (Volume 27) First Edition by Victoria E. Bonnell. You can find it on Amazon from this link.

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