Norman Rockwell's iconic "Freedom of Speech," 1943, growing out
of observations at town meetings in Arlington, Vt., appeared on
the cover of The Saturday Evening Post and then became a highly
effective poster in the campaign to sell war bonds in World War
II. Printed by US Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C.
Hoover Institution Archives.
At about the same time, American artist Ernest Hamlin Baker
exhorted women to work in industry to support the war effort by
showing masses of working women, as far as the eye can see,
marching purposefully together. Commissioned by the Young Women's
Christian Association, "For Every Fighter, a Woman Worker," 1918,
backed the United War Work Campaign.
Hungarian artist Janos Tabor's poster, "Red Soldiers Forward,"
1919, promoted the theme of the inevitable victory of the Red
armies by highlighting two muscular figures, framed by an
enormous red banner, leading a mass, represented by banners and
bayonets.
In his powerful poster, "1905 - The Road to October," 1929,
Russian artist Valentina Kulagina paid homage to the heroes of
the first popular uprising in 1905 that laid the groundwork for
the successful October Revolution of 1917. Vignettes detail
events in the 1905 conflict, including the massacre of
demonstrating workers outside the Winter Palace. Striding over
these depictions are five enormous, red-hued revolutionaries
backed by a "1905" banner leading the charge into the future.
Equally stirring is the inimitable N.C. Wyeth's "Buy War Bonds"
poster, 1942, in which a resolute Uncle Sam, the American flag
draped over his shoulder, points ahead. The message is that
bombers flying overhead and bayonet-wielding troops on the ground
are supported by the purchase of bonds.
Echoing the words of People's Republic of China leader Mao
Zedong, "Strengthen Yourself by Confronting High Waves and Mighty
Winds!", 1966-69, is a government poster in which smiling youths
plow through waves in a show of power and camaraderie. This was
an outgrowth of Mao's much-publicized swim across the Yangtze
River in 1966 that underscored his determination to pursue the
Cultural Revolution.
The manner in which crowds were depicted in action or, more
often, formed the backdrop for political posters promoting a
variety of causes, is examined in the section on "The Mass
Ornament." Thus, commissioned by the Maine Committee on Public
Safety, an unknown artist sought to assuage doubts about American
entry into World War I by depicting 2,000 naval reservists lined
up to spell out Victory in the 1917 "Victory. Fighting in France
for Freedom! Are You Helping at Home?"

Mihaly Biro's "Scoundrels! Is This What You Wanted?", 1919,
shows a red fist crashing into a meeting where the Treaty of
Versailles was being drafted, suggesting Hungary's frustration
after World War I at losing power and having its fate decided
by the victorious Allied powers. Printed by Rado; Orszagos
Propaganda Bizottsag, Budapest. Hoover Institution Archives.
Posters were a favored tool of the Communist regime in the
Soviet Union, as exemplified by Sergei Sen'kin's "Long Live the
First of May," 1929, a serpentine composition showing working
people who were honored on May Day.
East German Communists responded to tensions among religion, the
individual and the demands of a communal society by means of a
poster in which the face of a young woman in a cross-shaped
design was superimposed over a mass of people. Wolfgang Janisch's
"What is Man?", 1988, appeared just before mass protests toppled
the Communist regime in 1989.
Poster artists often utilize forms of hands, arms, ears and
mouths to symbolize participants in their causes, as explored in
the exhibition section devoted to "Anatomies of the Multitude."
The clenched fist has been a particularly useful symbol of power
and determination, whether demolishing a table around which peace
negotiators are at work at Versailles at the end of World War I
in a Hungarian poster of 1919, or celebrating the departure of
the shah and the victory of Ayatollah Khomeini in an Iranian
Embassy poster of 1980.
A giant pointing finger highlights Henry Koerner's "Someone
Talked," 1943, as it points to a small, walking man in one of
many posters addressing the dangers of loose talk in wartime. The
newspaper headline within the finger form, "U.S. SHIP SUNK BY..."
suggests that indiscreet talk caused the loss at sea.
A giant ear hanging on a brick wall in "Warning! Walls Have Ears!
Careful of What You Say!", dating to the early 1940s, was used by
an unknown artist in the government's campaign to promote
awareness among Americans of the dangers of conveying sensitive
information that might be picked up by Axis spies.
In a similar vein, an unknown artist depicted a dim-witted,
cartoonish GI spreading possibly harmful rumors through a
speaking trumpet in "Are You a Megaphone Mouth?", 1942. Schnapp
notes that this poster was hung in California military bases,
"where fears regarding security breaches and public conversation
regarding military operations were running high."

Jean Carlu's "America's Answer! Production," 1941, was used by
the government to promote American industrial growth to meet
the demands of the wartime economy. The gloved hand tightening
a bolt symbolized wartime expansion and America's postwar
emergence as the world's leading economic power. Printed by US
Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C. Hoover Institution
Archives.
In an effort to counter fascist inroads into Latin America
during World War II, Mexican artist Antonio Arias Bernal created
"Unity is Strength," early 1940s, in which caricatures of Hitler,
Mussolini and Hirohito cower beneath figures of a giant, muscular
worker and soldier shaking hands. It conveys the notion, says
Schnapp, "that victory in the war will depend upon the partnership
between industry and the military."
Perhaps the most famous World War II poster, "Freedom of Speech,"
1943, by Norman Rockwell, was originally created for the cover of
The Saturday Evening Post. Inspired by President Franklin
Roosevelt's "Four Freedoms" speech of 1941, the artist's image of
an ordinary American speaking his mind at a town meeting came to
symbolize what the United States was fighting for, and proved
useful in promoting sales of war bonds to support the war effort.
The tricky business of using quantitative data in poster art is
explored in the "Statistical Persons" grouping. One example,
promulgated by the Women's Bureau of the Department of Labor,
silhouettes a woman at her typewriter behind horizontal bar
graphs containing data about her activities, such as average
salaries for categories of office workers. "Women Office
Workers," 1934, is by an unknown artist.
A section titled "Mass Production/Mass Reproduction" examines
connections among modern politics, industrialization and mass
communications. The single gloved hand tightening a bolt in Jean
Carlu's "America's Answer! Production," 1941, reflects the push
to accelerate the nation's industrial growth to meet the demands
of a World War II economy.
"Kill Counts" refers to the inevitable presence of mass death due
to natural disasters, human savagery and modern warfare. Sherman
Raveson's poster, "Disarm or Be Destroyed! Write the President -
The Disarmament Conference Must Succeed!", 1931-32, was
commissioned by World Peace Posters, an organization formed by
prominent women to promote the cause of global disarmament. The
graphic composition, with a skull and two skeletal hands hovering
over a landscape littered with the devastation of war,
dramatically presses the case for President Herbert Hoover to
accept reductions in military expenditures at a forthcoming World
Disarmament Conference.

Stalwart figures with a huge red banner suggest the inevitable
triumph of Communism in a Hungarian poster by Janos Tabor, "Red
Soldiers Forward," 1919. Hoover Institution Archives.
In response to the mounting death toll in a far-off conflict,
Clergy and Laymen Concerned about Vietnam commissioned an unnamed
photographer to produce "This is Our Only Vietnam Deadline" in the
early 1970s. The image of countless white gravestones in a military
cemetery receding into the distance vividly suggested the
potentially devastating increase in the number of American war dead
and increased pressure for the withdrawal of US forces.
Three categories are grouped under the exhibition's general theme
of "Symbols." The subgroup labeled "Totems" investigates symbols
that serve as icons of collectivity - such as national flags and
figures like Uncle Sam - that provide a sense of community in a
world increasingly characterized by mobility and change. Popular
artist Howard Chandler Christy injected some sex appeal in "Fight
or Buy Bonds," 1918, a poster promoting the Third Liberty Loan. A
damsel in a diaphanous gown holds an American flag above her head
in one hand, while the other gestures toward US troops on the
march. In effect, she urges viewers to either purchase bonds or
join the army.
Another illustrator, Samuel Cherry, placed a large Red Cross
emblem front and center in his inspirational appeal for support
of the organization, "Join! Heed Their Appeal," 1939-45. The
crowd of citizens, young and old, reaching out to the emblem
reminds viewers of its mission to help all in need.
Striking photographic representations of Italian fascist leader
Benito Mussolini and President Woodrow Wilson are standouts in
the section on "Mass Leaders and Mass Deceivers," which features
superimposed figures over crowds. In the former image, a mass
rally with a sea of faces make up "Il Duce's" torso, whereas in
the latter, Wilson's head is composed of 21,000 soldiers arrayed
in a formation to replicate his profile.
"The Man of the Crowd" group focuses on the manner in which
ordinary citizens, often idealized figures, have been used to
symbolize causes or countries in poster art. Standouts are
stalwart figures representing German Nazis and Soviet Union
Communists.
The scholarly catalog concludes with a discussion about the
relevance of crowd-based political art in today's
information-based world. Will the future continue to be an era of
crowds, with mass gatherings in city streets and public squares,
even though virtual forms of assembly and political participation
are on the rise? Exhibition organizer Schnapp leaves that
question hanging, but in his show he provides powerful
documentation of the power and appeal of the political poster in
the turbulent years 1914 to 1989.
The 158-page exhibition catalog makes for pretty dense reading,
but is beautifully illustrated. Published by Skira in association
with the Cantor Arts Center, it is priced at $32.95 (softcover).
The Wolfsonian-Florida International University is at 1001
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www.wolfsonian.org.