Friday 9 March 2018

Chapter 90: The Intertwining of History and Posters in Latvia


The Latvians are part of the ancient group of peoples known as the Balts. During the 10th and 11th centuries, Latvian lands were under pressure: both from the  Slavic east  and from the Swedes in the west. During the time of the Crusades, German Saxons  expansion reached the eastern shores of the Baltic. Because the people occupying the coast of Latvia were the Livs, the German invaders called the country Livland, a name rendered in Latin as Livonia.

Lacplesis, Latvia’s epic, was written by Andrejs Pumpurs (1841-1902), who based his story line on existing Latvian folklore. The epic conjures up images of black magic, and also takes its fair share of shots at Germans.   Lacplesis, or the Bear Slayer, is part man, part bear, whose epic began in pagan Latvia of 800 years ago, around the time of the nation’s conquest by German Crusaders. The epic recounts the exploits of a giant-sized Lacplesis—who endeavors to defend his homeland from assorted invaders. Lacplesis, with his bearish large, fuzzy ears,  is a kindly figure,  who goes into action whenever his fellow Latvians are in trouble. His specialty is marauding bears, which he can slay by ripping their jaws apart with his bare hands.



 I Call and Am Called, Mystic Voice of Latvia,

Invitation-call Musical Latvian voice, Anti-Alcohol Day - 1938

Konrāds Ubāns, poster for the posthumous Jazeps Grosvalds exhibition  


Niklāvs Strunke, Illustration for "Tūkstots un viena nakts", 1926, Andrušaite  

Niklāvs Strunke 
Niklāvs Strunke  , Florencietis ziema, 1928
Niklāvs Strunke  Song Festival in Riga, June 17-19, 1933


Niklāvs Strunke


 Niklāvs Strunke, Poster for the festival of the people's University, 1920 


The attack, The Latvian riflemen, Drawing by G. Klucis for the stand at the 5th Soviet Congress 1918


God Bless Latvia-1918-1928 
An advertising poster for Cēsu alus, ca. 1935.


 Latvian Money for Latvian production only

Choral Festival 1938



 Sigulda, Winter Invitation to Vilage


On 16th June, 1940, the Russian Red Army  attacked  the Latvian border posts in Masļenki and Smaiļi.  The USSR issued  an ultimatum demanding the Latvian Government to resign and admit an unlimited number of Soviet troops to Latvia. The State President Kārlis Ulmanis and the government decided not to resist, in the hope of  at least preserving the sovereignty of Latvia.

 On 17 June, 1940, the USSR occupied Latvia. After the Latvian Government’s forced resignation, the so-called “People’s Government” with Augusts Kirheršteins as the leader was established. Latvian government's  activity was controlled by the USSR Embassy and Andrei Vyshinsky, Deputy Chairman of the Council of People’s Commissars of the USSR sent from Moscow.  Ulmanis, being under house arrest, formally continued to carry out the State President’s duties.

United in Work, United in Victory


After Germany’s attack on the USSR, in the summer of 1941 Latvia came under the power of National Socialist Germany, which considered Latvia being not a freed and independent state, but rather an occupied territory of the USSR. Initially, Latvia was subordinated to German military administration, but from 1 September – to the civil administration. The general regions of Latvia, Estonia, Lithuania and Belarus became the constituent of the Reich Commissariat for Ostland established by the Nazis.

Latvia - life, Bolshevism - death


Ler's take a step forward and spoil every diversionary activities and spionages and be prepared for the future!

At Home, at work!

1941 1st. July 1942, Goodluck for Future

You also have to fight for Latvia!



Latvia for  the Latvians, protect Latvia, Be a patriot and join, 

  Prevent your homeland! goes to Bolshevism!
Anti-Semitic poster
The uncompromising effort of the Soviet regime, in the first decade after the WWII, to transform the country into a typical Soviet bailiwick compounded the devastation of the war. Severe political repression accompanied radical socioeconomic change. A national renaissance developed in the late 1980s in connection with the Soviet campaigns for glasnost (“openness”) and perestroika (economic and political restructuring). 

An opposition Latvian Popular Front emerged in 1988 and won the 1990 elections. On May 4 the legislature passed a declaration to renew independence after a transition period. Soviet efforts to restore the earlier situation culminated in violent incidents in Riga in January 1991. After a failed coup in Moscow in August, the Latvian legislature declared full independence, which was recognized by the Soviet Union on September 6.

All to the Election!
A propaganda poster, quoting Joseph Stalin, with regard to the desirability of seasonal work. 

Raimonds Šiško. Poster. Lithography Riga, "State Printing Works", 1937





Juris Dimiters

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Friday 2 March 2018

Chapter 89 : A History of Travel Posters

Poster art has always been a powerful form of visual communication, in addition to an art form in its own right. Travel posters began in the early 20th century as a vehicle for the Tourism Industry advertisement. Employing exotic sceneries,  vivid and bold colors and provoking a sense of adventure and exploration, they enticed the observer to book trips and purchase tickets to new and exotic places-whether by train, ship, Zeppelin, or airplane. During the late 1800s until about 1950, posters, print ads, and brochures were the most common way for travel companies and agencies to reach their customers.

Cities spend billions of dollars each year  for marketing  economic, residential, business and tourism development, yet 97% of these expenses is ineffective.  Because people in the developed countries  are exposed to average 5,000 marketing messages a day – far more than the mind can absorb – so they automatically filter out generic marketing messages and those that don’t cater to their individual needs or desires. This is why a consistent visual communication via posters is a powerful tool for branding a city and  marketing its tourism.









With the technological advances in transportation of the early 20th century, that reduced the cost of travel,  railroads, ocean liners and airplanes, promoted the idea of pleasurable and luxurious travel, offering people the freedom to explore the world. This sparked the “Golden Age of Travel” which lasted until the outbreak of World War II. 

The tourism and hospitality industry including hotels, airlines, railroads and entertainment parks used travel posters to graphically create an image of themselves to the public. Many Graphic designers used the recently developed  lithographic printing process to create stunning works of art that ranged in style from art nouveau to mid-century modern. By the early 1900s, Hugo d’Alesi (France), Emile Cardinaux (Switzerland) and Adolfo Hohenstein (Italy)  combined stylised images with bold typography that were quite effective medium to inspire travelers to explore the world, and their posters were prominently displayed on kiosks,  in train stations , burgeoning travel agencies, docks, depots, and later at airports of Europe and America to create demand.  By the 1920s, A. M. Cassandre, his pupil Fix-Masseau, Tom Purvis, Frank Newbould and other artists transformed the travel poster from illustration to real artwork. 

The graphic designers   not only created the imagery strong and appealing to promote a safe and magical experience,  but also contributed to educate the public with the grammar of visual communication. Some used images of children to show the wonderment of travel through their  adventuros eyes, as illustrated in a 1964 poster for Grace Line Ocean Liners.  Others included  mythical figures to represent adventure,  excitement or safety, and some used native women in their national costumes, or various symbols or stylised monuments. 


 





Shipyards in Germany, Italy and France had all eclipsed other competitors tonnage and their ships. RMS Queen Mary was completed by August 1934 and in 1935, the gigantic ocean liner, S.S. Normandie, was launched.  They, Normandie in particular,  inaugurated a new era in transatlantic travel. Normandie set new standards of luxury, speed, steadiness, comfort and safety, and  was the largest liner afloat -- indeed  different in almost every respect. It was a new kind of ocean liner which was considered the epitome of luxurious travel. The graphic designers of Normandie's  posters were able to project this colossal power and strength in  their posters.   

  








On August 11, 1938 the first nonstop transAtlantic commercial flight by a land-based aircraft, a four-engine Focke-Wulf Fw 200 “Condor” developed by a German manufacturer and flown by Lufthansa  landed at Floyd Bennett Field, now a park in Brooklyn, after taking off about 25 hours earlier from Berlin on a 3,728-mile flight.The era of intercontinental air travel had started.

Other airlines such as the British Imperial Airways and Pan American Airways began working toward experimental transatlantic flights only in 1936, partly because the British were unwilling to grant landing rights for American air carriers until then. Both airlines decided to use flying boats because concrete runways were rare at coastal airports on the Atlantic, and also because landplanes capable of flying such distances without refueling simply did not exist at the time. 

 On December 9, 1937, Pan American invited bids from eight U.S. airplane manufacturers to build a 100-seat long-range airliner. Boeing, which won the competition, offered its legendary B-314 flying boat. Pan American inaugurated the world's first transatlantic passenger service on June 28, 1939, between New York and Marseilles, France, and on July 8 between New York and Southampton. 

By the beginning of World War II, Pan American, with its considerable experience in Pacific and South American operations with the famous Clipper service, dominated the transatlantic routes. The airline offered regular flights with its seaplanes from La Guardia airport in New York City to Lisbon in Portugal, which was the most common entry point into Europe at the time.

German Zeppelin, Hamburg -Amerika Linie


Experience the Orient (Erleben Sie Den Orient Mit) - Lufthansa German Airlines, Hans Rott

















































































The competition among airlines created a surge in travel posters, and they could be found everywhere.  As Henry Miller once said, “One’s destination is never a place, but rather a new way of seeing things.” However, not all airlines had a  artistic sensibility to understand this dictum, and their  posters were a distasteful collection of tacky images in flashy colours with awful typography crowded with information. On the other hand, some other airlines, like Sabena of Belgium, had always created posters that in that have stood the test of time and contributed to aesthetics of visual communication. 















The very first commercial air flight took off on January 1st of 1914 from St. Petersburg, Florida to Tampa, Florida. By the 1920’s, Charles Lindbergh reached iconic celebrity status with his dream of crossing the Atlantic.  His transatlantic trip in 1927 proved to the world that air travel was a quick and safe option, opening new parts of the world to vacation exploration. The most renowned artists of the time were commissioned, their artwork and images reflecting the styles of the Art Nouveau, Art Deco, Impressionist, Cubist and Modern eras. 

One of the most prolific and sought-after travel poster artists is A. M. Cassandre (aka Adolphe Jean-Marie Mouron). Born in the Ukraine, Cassandre studied art in Paris at the famed Ecole des Beaux-Arts and Academie Julian, and was greatly inspired by Bauhaus, cubism, and surrealism. While he started work at a Parisian print house producing posters, he later set up his own advertising agency called Alliance Graphique. Cassandre’s poster of a large commercial steamship titled “L’Atlantique” from 1931 has one of the highest records set for a travel poster at auction at Christie’s in June of 2014, hammering down at 30,000 British Pounds, roughly $50,880 in U.S. Dollars. 










In the 1950s and ’60s, when commercial air travel was still considered glamorous, Trans World Airlines (TWA) was one of the world’s premier passenger carriers.  In 1930, TWA merged with Western Air Express to form Transcontinental and Western Air, Inc. (TWA). The airline took advantage of its association with Lindbergh in its advertising, which gave them prestige in the eyes of the public, who were wild about him. In 1950, to reflect TWA’s expanding international service, Howard Hughes, who had acquired a majority share of  TWA in 1939, changed the name from Transcontinental and Western Air to Trans World Airlines, preserving the acronym.

Some of the best TWA posters from the 1950s and ‘60s were created by artist David Klein (1918 – 2005). Already a successful illustrator known in the late 1940s and early 1950s for his Broadway show window cards and posters, Klein’s award-winning abstract drawings for TWA came to represent the jet age. Klein won many awards for his TWA work. In 1957, his TWA poster of New York City became a part of the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art in New York. Klein won many excellence awards for his great design work for TWA from the Society of Illustrators.

David Klein. New York Fly TWA. 1956. MOMA






Braniff International Airways was an innovative American airline that in 1960s advertised that it is creating ...
the most beautiful airline in the world. We hired Emilio Pucci to design our uniforms. Our hostesses wear reversible coats of almond green and apricot, space helmets to keep out the rain, red spacesuits and sometimes something a little more comfortable... We have blue planes, orange planes, yellow planes...
The company recruited Mary Wells a young designer who proposed a pop-hued, psychedelic scheme for Braniff. She and her team brought in Italian designer Emilio Pucci to design the staff uniforms (he even created plastic “space bubbles” to protect their hairdos) and commissioned pop designer Alexander Girard to paint the fuselage of the planes in bright, candy-colored patterns. Braniff’s tagline was, “the end of the plain plane!” “Suddenly, Braniff was seen as a modern, chic company that would make flying fun.”   Braniff 's posters captured its innovative vision. 
















































Left: “Monte Carlo Flowers” poster by Jean Gabriel Domergue, 1950;
Right: “Oostende to Dover” poster by Marfurt, 1931,





“Summer in Switzerland”, 1921


Left: "Middelkerke Belgium Bains Gratuits" by Baillie, 1923;
Right: "Fly TWA to New York," unknown artist, c. 1955,

‘Orient Calls,’ Mune Satomi, 1936


‘Palestine Line,’ T. Trepkowski, 1935




 David Klein, Egypt
Klein’s early career was as a painter and illustrator before becoming a part of the California Watercolor Society in the 30s. His vintage travel posters emanate the style so closely associated with the group – bold colours and thick brushstrokes drawn onto paper with no pre-planning.


‘Visit Palestine,’ Franz Krausz, ca. 1930s



The Hamburg-America Line, by Albert Fuss  ca. 1930s.

‘Motoring in Germany,’ Ludwig Hohlwein, 




"Annecy Sa Plage" Robert Falcucci - 1935
"Veneux Fontainebleau" Prieur - 1930



TWA Spain 

‘Klosters. Graubnden, Schweiz,’ J. C. Müller,










‘Varmland, Sweden. An unspoiled mecca for tourists,’ Beckman, 1936








Cote d'Azur Jean-Gabriel Domergue

L'Ete sur la Cote d'azur Roger Broders

Les Sables d'Olonne Walter Thor




‘Alaska via Canadian Pacific, Taku Glacier,’ Greenwood


Greyhound's Los Angeles  Disneyland Poster.  ca. 1960s




 Southern Pacific's California Beaches poster, by Maurice Logan, ca. 1920s


United Air Lines' Southern California poster, by Stan Galli, ca. 1955

 Pacific Coast Highway
Laguna Beach, California

United Air Lines San Francisco, Cable Car Posters by Stan Galli

California Carmel by the Sea


Lake tahoe california

San Diego, California - Old Town 
California Sailboat Boat Sport Travel

Sunny California - Surf's Up

Yosemite

Key West Florida Travel Poster by Kerne Erickson


Grand Canyon National Park


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