 
  Drive out the kulaks – Elect poor and middle peasants to the councils. [Panel 1 reads]: "How in the village of Kalistratka All the peasants, without a looking back Elected the kulaks...". [Partial translation]
Poster Number: PP 1141
			  		  	  			  										Category: Events
							  		  		  	  				Media Size: 28x23
			  		  	  				Poster Type: Lithograph
			  		  	  				Publishing Date: 1920
			  		  		  		  		  		  	  				Sources & Citation: Soviet Posters of the era of the Civil War 1918-1921 by B. S. Butnik-Siverskii (1960), page 440, poster 2875
			  		  	  				Catalog Notes: PP 1141 Events b
			  		  	  				USSR Region: Ukrainian SSR
			  		  		  	  Artist: UkROSTA (All-Ukrainian Bureau of the Russian Telegraph Agency) — УкРОСТА (Всеукраинского бюро Российского телеграфного агентства)
					UkROSTA was a Soviet news organization founded in January 1920. Its creation served to replace the Bureau of the Ukrainian Press.  While UkROSTA was a news organization, it also employed a cadre of artists to design posters for publication.  Frequently, the artists (working as a collective) did not attribute their names to the artwork they designed for UkROSTA.
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			Printer: Lithography Workshop of M.G. Ravitskii, Kharkov — Литография М. Г. Равицкий, Харьков
					Little published information is available on the Kharkov-based lithography workshop of M.G. Ravitskii. However, Ravitskii was likely a working artist before and during the Soviet-era.  Published sources from the Soviet Union indicate Ravitskii had a printing business in Kiev.  Beyond that, Ravitskii’s name appears as an artist in at least one 21st century Russian publication on graphic art during World War I.
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			Publisher: All-Ukrainian State Publishing House — Всеукраинское издательство (Всеукриздат)
			All-Ukrainian State Publishing House (Vseukrizdat) was founded in 1919 as the State Publishing House of Ukraine and its formation was based upon a directive by the All-Ukrainian Central Executive Committee.  The publishing house had branches in the cities of Kharkov, Kiev, Volyn', Poltava and other locations in Ukraine.  In 1920, the publisher was renamed All-Ukrainian State Publishing and in 1922, the publisher was renamed DVU (Derzhavne vydavnytstvo Ukrainy).  DVU became the largest publisher in Soviet Ukraine and the ...
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