176

DESIGNER UNKNOWN PREVENT THIS. 1942.
50x38 inches, 127x96 1/2 cm. General Electric Co.
Condition A- / B+: creases along sharp horizontal fold; minor tears at edges. Paper.
Many U.S. companies began creating propaganda during the Second World War in order to help convert their employees from simply being workers into "production soldiers on the industrial front line of war" (Design for Victory p. 66). These images include the iconic "Rosie the Riveter." General Electric used a ghoulish image of the results of a German victory to help spur on employee productivity and energize the home front into backing the war effort. This is the larger format.


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August 5, 2015 10:30 AM EDT
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