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Bread is our strength [it is a] Grave for interventionists. Collect the harvest.

Número de Cartel: PP 1205
Información sobre el cartel: Bread and wheat are the positive messages and yet the poster was issued during a period of natural disaster and agricultural inadequacies that brought forth the Soviet Famine of 1931–1933.
Tamaño: 39x27
Tipo de cartel: Litografía y Offset
Fecha de publicación: 1931
Editores: Editor Babeva
Información técnica: IzoGiz No. 2161 R.31; No 356; Price 50 kopeks. Send your comments about this poster to: Moscow, IZOGIZ, Mass Agitation Sector.
Número de Glavlit: B-7575
En el catologo: PP 1205 Agriculture b
Artista: Moor (Orlov), Dmitrii Stakhievich — Моор (Орлов), Дмитрий Стахиевич
Dmitrii Stakhievich Moor (birth surname Orlov) was born into the family of a mining engineer and did not receive formal artistic education. After moving to Moscow in 1898, and between 1902 and 1906, he actively participated in the city’s revolutionary movement, specifically taking part in the failed 1905 Revolution. While working at the Anatolii Mamontov printing shop, he submitted his drawings to periodicals. In 1908, he began to publish his cartoons in satirical journals, namely in Budil'nik [Alarm Clock]. Wh...
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Izvestiia (News) All-Union Central Executive Committee Typography Offset Print Shop was located in Moscow and it printed the Izvestiia newspaper. Both Izvestiia and Pravda (Truth) were the leading newspapers in the Soviet Union despite the Soviet-era joke that quipped, "there is no news in Pravda and no truth in Izvestia". Among the longest-running of all Russian newspapers, Izvestiia was founded in Petrograd (St. Petersburg) in March 1917 and was an organ of the Petrograd ...
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