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"Voroshilov’s kilograms"

Poster Number: PP 373
Category: World War II
Poster Notes: The title is in reference to Kliment Voroshilov (1881-1969), Commissar of Defense. He was a Marshal of the Soviet Union (despite his reputation for being a poor strategist) before and during the U.S.S.R.’s involvement in World War II. After Stalin’s death in 1953, Voroshilov was removed from a position of direct political power.
Media Size: 39.5x29x5
Poster Type: Lithograph
Publishing Date: 1939
Editorial Information: Editor M. Lebedev; Technical Editor Ia. Ustinov
Technical Information on Poster: Submitted for production and approved for printing April 25, 1939; Voenizdat I -400; Price 1 ruble, 50 kopeks
Glavlit Directory Number: G-2864
Catalog Notes: PP 373 World War II
Artist: Deni (Denisov), Viktor Nikolaevich — Дени (Денисов), Виктор Николаевич
Although known for his characterizations and posters that he signed with the pseudonym 'Deni'; Viktor Nikolayevich Denisov never received formal artistic education. Around 1906, Deni began exhibiting at the annual exhibitions of the Society of Independents in Saint Petersburg, as well as at the Salon of Humorists. In 1910, he took private lessons in painting and drawing from the artist-portraitist Nikolai P. Ulianov and that same year, he became active in the field of political caricature, contributing ...
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Printer: Izostat Institute Typolithography Workshop, Moscow — Типолитография Института Изостат, Москва
Izostat (All-Union Institute of Pictorial Statistics of Soviet Construction and Economy) printing workshop was located in Moscow at 9 Bolshoi Komsomol'skii Street. Izostat existed from 1931 to 1940 and it specialized in visual aids (infographics) to help citizens become familiar with statistical and numeric data.
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Publisher: State Military Publishing House NKO, Moscow — Народный комиссариат обороны (НКО)
The State Military Publishing House NKO (People's Commissariat of Defense) was the publishing arm of the Commissariat of Defense, the highest military department of the Soviet Union from 1934 to 1946. The NKO merged with the People's Commissariat of the Navy in 1946 to form a single entity-- the People’s Commissariat of the Armed Forces. The new organization was placed under the Ministry of Armed Forces of the USSR.
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