Skip to content
By the end of the Five-Year Plan, industrial production will have increased by more than three times in comparison with the pre-war period.
The Red Army is strong with its fighting spirit, class-consciousness and unity of interests with the workers of the whole world.

By the end of the Five-Year Plan, industrial production will have increased by more than three times in comparison with the pre-war period. The Red Army is strong with its fighting spirit, class-consciousness and unity of interests with the workers of the whole world.

Poster Number: PP 725
Category: Military
Poster Notes:

[On the top] Be on the Lookout!
[On the top left] International Imperialism is preparing an intervention against the Union [sic] of the USSR.
[On the top right] In peacetime there are 1,500,000 troops of the bourgeois armies on the borders of the USSR.
[partial translation offered]

Media Size: 45x31
Poster Type: Lithograph
Publishing Date: 1929
Technical Information on Poster: Publication [illegible]; Order No. 1367
Glavlit Directory Number: A-41544
Catalog Notes: PP 725 Military
Artist: Artist Unknown — неизвестный художник
The artist's name on the poster is not indicated. By assigning Artist Unknown to a poster it also could mean the artist used a chop mark whereby no signature is seen thus rendering the artist's identity anonymous.
Read More About This Artist
Printer: 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...
Read More About This Printer
Publisher: State Publishing House — Государственный издательство
The State Publishing House had its origins in Imperial Russia as the Royal Print Yard of St. Petersburg. In 1917, the Soviets nationalized the print yard and requisitioned its presses. From requisitioning emerged the Publishing House of the Petrograd Soviet that was formed in the winter of 1917 by the Literary and Publishing Department of People's Commissariat for Education. In 1919, the State Publishing House in St. Petersburg changed its name to Petrogosizdat (Petrograd State Publishing) and in 1924, ...
Read More About This Publisher