 
  Under the leadership of Stalin -- our Motherland will go forward to a new flourishing!
Poster Number: PP 642
			  		  	  			  										Category: Stalin
							  		  		  	  				Media Size: 41x28.5
			  		  	  				Poster Type: Lithograph and Offset
			  		  	  				Publishing Date: c.1946
			  		  	  				Editorial Information: Editor  S. Gelberg
			  		  	  				Technical Information on Poster: Publication No. 525; Order No. 5756; Price 2 rubles
			  		  	  				Print Run: 15,000
			  		  	  				Glavlit Directory Number: JT 03071
			  		  		  	  				Catalog Notes: PP 642 Stalin; Sister poster 167
			  		  	  				USSR Region: Latvian SSR
			  		  	  				Language: Latvian
			  		  	  Artist: Golub’, Petr Semenovich — Голубь, Петр Семенович
					Petr Golub' attended the Moscow Institute of Fine Arts and graduated in 1938.  His final work there was a large painting executed in gouache, The Dance of the Collective Farm Workers. Upon graduation, he permanently settled in Moscow. In 1944, he began to professionally participate in exhibitions; the first of such took place in Orenburg. He worked mainly as a poster artist but contributed illustrations as well to the journal Ogonek [Flame] (1947-1948) and he also produced ...
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			Artist: Chernov, Anatolii Mikhailovich — Чернов, Анатолий Михайлович
					There is little published information available about the life and career of Anatolii Chernov.  He graduated from the Moscow Institute of Fine Arts in 1938, and during his professional life, worked in the field of graphic design and monumental art. Throughout his career, the artist designed posters for the publishing house of Iskusstvo (Art). Some of the posters he designed were made in collaboration with the Soviet artist, Petr Golub’.  A few of Chernov's poster titles in...
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			Printer: LPT Typography, Riga — 
			Publisher: Latgosizdat (Latvian State Publishing House) — Латгосиздат (Латвийское государственное издательство)
			Until World War II, Latvia had thriving publishing and printing industries.  Between Soviet annexation in 1940 and the German occupation in 1941, Lativa's position as a European publishing hub drastically changed. Around 1940 Lativa's largest publisher, Liesma (Flame), was nationalized during Soviet annexation. The publisher became VAPP (Department of State Book Publishers and Polygraphic Enterprises) and was controlled as a state-run entity.  From 1946-1964, VAPP was named Latgosizdat and in 1965, the publisher was re-named Liesma.  It specialized in ...
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