Vintage Poster Archives
Soviet Propaganda Pravda 1941 | Viktor Deni War Poster
Soviet Propaganda Pravda 1941 | Viktor Deni War Poster
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A black crow pierced by a red spear bearing the Pravda newspaper masthead against a radiant orange background. Viktor Deni designed this Soviet propaganda poster in 1941 as part of the campaign against reactionary press during the early months of World War II.
Deni, one of the founding figures of Soviet political poster art, worked for Pravda newspaper from 1921 onwards. This poster represents his wartime output targeting opposition media, using his characteristic bold imagery and saturated colour palette to deliver the state's message.
The composition reduces complex political messaging to stark visual metaphor: the spear of truth piercing deception. Produced during the critical early phase of the Great Patriotic War when controlling information flow was paramount to Soviet survival.
Reproduced as an archival print on 200gsm Enhanced Matte Fine Art Paper using museum-quality pigment inks.
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A black crow pierced by a red spear bearing the Pravda newspaper masthead against a radiant orange background. Viktor Deni designed this Soviet propaganda poster in 1941 as part of the campaign against reactionary press during the early months of World War II.
Deni, one of the founding figures of Soviet political poster art, worked for Pravda newspaper from 1921 onwards. This poster represents his wartime output targeting opposition media, using his characteristic bold imagery and saturated colour palette to deliver the state's message.
The composition reduces complex political messaging to stark visual metaphor: the spear of truth piercing deception. Produced during the critical early phase of the Great Patriotic War when controlling information flow was paramount to Soviet survival.
Reproduced as an archival print on 200gsm Enhanced Matte Fine Art Paper using museum-quality pigment inks.
