Is The Volga To Survive Or ...
Poster
1989 (published)
1989 (published)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
Poster with a map of the river Volga in the form of a question mark, dotted with symbols of hydro-electric stations.
Object details
Category | |
Object type | |
Title | Is The Volga To Survive Or ... (manufacturer's title) |
Materials and techniques | Colour offset lithograph |
Brief description | Poster with a map of the river Volga in the form of a question mark. Russia, 1989. |
Physical description | Poster with a map of the river Volga in the form of a question mark, dotted with symbols of hydro-electric stations. |
Dimensions |
|
Production type | Mass produced |
Marks and inscriptions | 'These days it is not necessary to ask "whose lament resounds over the great Russian river". The Volga itself cries out, pock-marked length and breadth, ailing with dirty water, stretched out of shape by hydo-electric weirs, swelling from artificial reservoirs and year after year its celebrated wealth of fish stocks is exterminated. Looking at theVolga, especially, you understand the cost of our civilisation - that blessing which lured man, like a foolish infant, substuituting for the joy that was joy the egotistical achievements and victories'. One of a number of posters punlished by the Soviet state publishing house "Plakat" on the theme of the environment in teh late 1980s and early 1990s., writer, hero of socialst labour. (Text in Russian within the image of the poster, quoting an extract from the writings of Valentin Rasputin.) |
Credit line | Given by Dr David Segal |
Historical context | One of a number of posters punlished by the Soviet state publishing house "Plakat" on the theme of the environment in the late 1980s and early 1990s. It quotes an extract of writings by the ecologically aware Soviet writer Valentin Rasputin calling for protection of the Volga river. Also the entry for the river Volga taken from page 239 of the Soviet Encyclopaedic Dictionary, published Moscow 1986 |
Production | Attribution note: Published in a print run of 22,000 |
Subjects depicted | |
Collection | |
Accession number | E.2050-1991 |
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Record created | March 4, 2009 |
Record URL |
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