Can you resist the art of persuasion?
Loose lips might sink
ships! Strong men, to the front! “The Art of Influence: Propaganda Postcards
from the Era of World Wars” presents approximately 150 postcards from World War
I through the end of World War II, a time of conflict and upheaval on a global
scale. With pithy slogans and bold colors, striking graphics and biting
caricatures, postcards from the first half of the 20th century conveyed
messages that were easily understood and remembered. This is art with an
agenda, meant to justify war, lionize leaders, demonize the enemy, or
underscore the need for citizens to make sacrifices for the cause.
“The Art of Influence”
highlights postcards as both valuable historical documents and masterworks of
graphic design. Featuring approximately 150 postcards produced in Europe, the
Soviet Union, the United States, and Japan, the exhibition explores a range of
themes connected to early 20th-century propaganda, including leaders, heroes,
villains, abstractions, fake news, and mockery. Propaganda was everywhere, transmitted
on card stock that was cheap to produce, purchase, and mail. We are setting off
for England! (1940) lampoons British leaders, shown looking in the wrong
direction during an invasion by German paratroops. In 5th Camp Dux, Opera
Balilla (1935), pictured above, members of an elite youth organization in
fascist Italy march toward the viewer with clenched fists, outfitted in the
trappings of the junior brigade. Whether produced by government propaganda
bureaus, opportunistic publishers, aid organizations, or resistance movements,
postcards were designed to build and maintain public support as the world
hurtled from one crisis to the next.
All of the postcards on
view are drawn from the Leonard A. Lauder Postcard Archive. Lauder began
collecting postcards during his childhood in Miami Beach, and his collection of
roughly 100,000 postcards constitutes the single most comprehensive and
carefully gathered in the world.
In addition to postcards,
“The Art of Influence” features selected posters and film clips that
demonstrate the potency of propaganda across a wide range of media. The same
techniques and themes were in play no matter the politics of the regime. “The
Art of Influence” invites us to consider how politics and propaganda are
intertwined, both in the context of the first half of the 20th century and in
our own time. How do words and images shape our collective consciousness? Can
you resist the art of persuasion?
https://www.mfa.org/exhibitions/the-art-of-influence
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