![¡Viva la jornada dedicada de la cosecha y la colectivización – 
día festivo en el nuevo campo socialista!
“El cultivo de la tierra colectivizada es el primer paso hacia una agricultura socialista, un golpe seguro para los explotadores de los campesinos. 
¡El primer haz [de trigo] se utilizará para la industrialización de la URSS!”](https://www.posterplakat.com/content/1-the-collection/posters/0-pp-138/PP138.jpg) 
  ¡Viva la jornada dedicada de la cosecha y la colectivización – día festivo en el nuevo campo socialista! “El cultivo de la tierra colectivizada es el primer paso hacia una agricultura socialista, un golpe seguro para los explotadores de los campesinos. ¡El primer haz [de trigo] se utilizará para la industrialización de la URSS!”
Número de Cartel: PP 138
			  		  	  			  								  		  		  	  				Tamaño: 46.5x31
			  		  	  				Tipo de cartel: Litografía
			  		  	  				Fecha de publicación: c.1930
			  		  		  	  				Información técnica: From the original of the artist Khristoforov S. A., Price 60 kopeks.
			  		  	  				Ediciones: 30,000
			  		  	  				Número de Glavlit: A 46548
			  		  		  	  				En el catologo: PP 138 Agriculture
			  		  		  		  	  Artista: Khristoforov, Sergei Alexandrovich — Христофоров, Сергей Алехангрович
			Imprenta: Mospoligraf (Moscow Polygraphic), Moscow — Мосполиграф, Москва
					Mospoligraf was a state-owned printing trust located in Moscow.  When the Soviet Union formulated a plan in 1921 to consolidate the nation’s largest and best printing operators into state-owned trusts; Mospoligraf was organized in 1922 to carry out consolidation of the Moscow printing industry. With a staff of over two thousand, Mospoligraf was the second-largest printing trust organized in Moscow outside of the Mospechat’ trust, and it oversaw a myriad of houses under local printing sections such...
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			Editorial: A.Kh.R. (Association of Artists of the Revolution) — А.Х.Р (Ассоциация Художников Революции)
			The Association of Artists of the Revolution was an artist cooperative from 1928 to 1932. From 1922-1928 it was called the Association of Artists of Revolutionary Russia.  During the 1920s, the Association rose to prominence in the Soviet art world. It opened branches throughout the USSR, and it operated its own publishing house in Moscow at 25 Tsvetnoi Boulevard.  The Association was abolished in 1932 when the government centralized a majority of independent arts organizations in the USSR.
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