 
  Long live May 1st!
Poster Number: PP 714
			  		  	  			  										Category: Events
							  		  		  	  				Media Size: 41x29
			  		  	  				Poster Type: Lithograph and Offset
			  		  	  				Publishing Date: 1937
			  		  	  				Editorial Information: Editor M. Ioffe; Technical Editor E. Strukov
			  		  	  				Technical Information on Poster: Izogiz No. 8763; I. 32; Submitted for production February 21, 1937; Approved for printing March 15, 1937; Order No. 681; Standard format 62 x 94; Volume 1 sheet of paper; Price 80 kopeks
			  		  	  				Print Run: 150,000
			  		  	  				Glavlit Directory Number: B-7133
			  		  		  	  				Catalog Notes: PP 714 Events
			  		  		  		  	  Artist: Shubina, Galina Konstantinova — Шубина, Галина Константиновна
					Galina Konstantinova Shubina graduated from VKHUTEIN [Higher Art and Technical Institute] in Leningrad in 1928.  Her main area of specialization was in graphic design and it included the development of posters.  In 1929, she began to exhibit her work.  Starting in 1940 and continuing into the 1950s, Shubina produced posters for Izogiz, the Soviet-based publisher.  The body of work she created for the publisher launched her career and it made her one of the best-known female graphic artists ...
			Read More About This Artist
			Printer: Gudok Typography Workshop, Moscow — Типография Гудок, Москва
					Gudok is the Russian word for whistle and it was also the name given to the railway industry newspaper in the Soviet Union. The newspaper's printing workshop was in Moscow at 7 Stankevich Street (formerly Voznesenskii Lane), a street named after Alexander Stankevich (1821-1912), the Russian writer, biographer and publisher.  From the end of the nineteenth century until 1918, the location served as the printing house and editorial offices of the liberal newspaper "Russian News" (...
			Read More About This Printer
			Publisher: Ogiz-IzoGiz, Moscow-Leningrad — Огиз-Изогиз, Москва-Ленинград
			Ogiz was the Association of the State Book and Magazine Publishers. Its main offices were located in Moscow and in Leningrad.  The Sovnarkom of the Russian Socialist Federative Soviet Republic established Ogiz in 1930 to centralize publishing activities under a state monopoly in order to eliminate duplication of printed material, streamline and control publishing production and output, and to create a base for marketing books, training and technical manuals.  In 1931, the Central Committee of the USSR ...
		Read More About This Publisher