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View British School WWII Propaganda Poster, c.1939, THE EMPIRE'S STRENGTH, THE SINEWS OF WAR: SOUTH AFRICA (Circa 1939) By British School, 19th Century; lithograph on wove paper; 40 x 25 in — 101 x 63 ...
The people’s propaganda. A full-page illustration ran in the film magazine Picturpost in 1945 under the caption “Our War”.It depicted Indian civilians, women and men, marching behind a ...
“The enemy sees your light! Blackout!” A poster from World War II (c.1942). Designed by Otto Sander-Herweg and published in Dresden by the Deutsche Propaganda Atelier, it was one of many similar ...
The idea that eating carrots improving a person’s night vision originated in World War II British propaganda, although the purpose and intended target of the propaganda is not entirely clear. To make ...
We learn that one of the most familiar propaganda posters in this collection, the American World War II icon “Loose lips might sink ships,” was designed by Seymour Rinaldo Goff, head of the ...
First World War propaganda had mainly been waged by poster art – indeed, it was Hitler's belief that Great Britain's poster campaigns had helped win the war that spurred him on to create Germany ...
In response to the Department of Art History & Art Conservation's call for stories of student achievements, Kristen Fader (M.A.C., 2023) describes her use of a Karibari board, to restore the condition ...
This World War II-era propaganda poster features an illustration of two vessels that took part in the conflict. Depicted is the British Royal Navy Dido-class light cruiser HMS Hermione (74) ramming ...
Over the course of World War II, more than 40 newspapers and magazines in the U.S. and Canada started “rumor clinics” to debunk the lies and fight back with facts.
A World War II propaganda poster will be on ... She said she would be bringing to Greenwich a set of letters from a British Royal Navy sailor from the 1820s and a number of World War II posters.