Artist/Illustrator: M Gorshman.
Babelʹ, I, M Gorshman, and V A. Milashevskiĭ. Konarmii︠a︡. Moskva: Gos. izd-vo khudozhestvennoĭ literatury, 1933. Print.
Tatlin’s Tower, or the project for the Monument to the Third International (1919–20), was a design for a grand monumental building by the Russian artist and architect Vladimir Tatlin, that was never built.[2] It was planned to be erected in Petrograd (now St. Petersburg) after the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, as the headquarters and monument of the Comintern (the third international).
Attribution:
By Unknown - http://barista.media2.org/?cat=14&paged=2, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=12958279
Artist/Illustrator: M. Gorshman
Babelʹ, I, M Gorshman, and V A. Milashevskiĭ. Konarmii︠a︡. Moskva: Gos. izd-vo khudozhestvennoĭ literatury, 1933. Print.
Raise Higher the Banner of Marx, Engels, Lenin and Stalin.
Artist: Gustav Klustis.
Although, this banner is ca. 1933, it shows the propaganda that the Soviet Union engaged in to keep the motivation of the revolution alive. It was a sort of images of power and glory floating from an icon and reaching the masses. At the same time, there was a violent repression that the Soviet State carried out against its own citizens.
Artist: Nikolai Kogout.
The title can be translated as follows, "We defeated the Enemy with Weapons."
Title Russkii revoliutsionnyi plakat.
Author Polonskiĭ, Vi︠a︡ch. (Vi︠a︡cheslav), 1886-1932.
Published [Moscow, R.S.F.S.R.] Gos. izd-vo 1925.
Babelʹ, I, M Gorshman, and V A. Milashevskiĭ. Konarmii︠a︡. Moskva: Gos. izd-vo khudozhestvennoĭ literatury, 1933.
Main (Gardner) Stacks PG3476.B2 K6 1933
Babelʹ, I, M Gorshman, and V A. Milashevskiĭ. Konarmii︠a︡. Moskva: Gos. izd-vo khudozhestvennoĭ literatury, 1933.
Main (Gardner) Stacks PG3476.B2 K6 1933