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Deutsch: Bolschewismus ohne Maske Grosse antibolschewistische Ausstellung der NSDAP. Wien, Nordwestbahnhalle, Dezember 1938 bis Februar 1939.
  • Originale Ausstellungsillustration von 1937 (siehe Fotos von der November 1937 Eröffnung der Ausstellung "Bolschewismus ohne Maske" im Reichstagsgebäude, Berlin)
  • Plakat; Ausstellungsplakat ; Propagandaplakat; Künstlerplakat; Werbeplakat; farbige Plakatkarte für antibolschewistische Ausstellungspropaganda
  • Waldheim Eberle A.G., Wien, Österreich, Großdeutsches Reich, 1938
  • NSDAP Propaganda; NS-Propaganda; Propagandakampagne gegen die Sowjetunion; Antikommunismus, Antibolschewismus; Wien Nordwestbahnhof
  • alamy.de: Nazi-Deutschland; der 1930er Jahre; antikommunistische, bolschewistische Wahlpropaganda; 'Bolschewismus ohne Maske', die einen Todeskopf illustriert, den russischen sowjetischen Soldaten, der eine brennende Welt mit Gewalt beherrscht, mit Hammer und Sichelsymbol, das mit dem jüdischen Davidstern verschlungen ist
  • akg-images: Von 1936 bis 1938 führten die Nazis mehrere antibolschewistische Propagandakampagnen durch. Hitler und Goebbels hielten neben anderen auf den Nürnberger Parteitagen virulente Reden. 1937 organisierte die Gauleitung Berlin der NSDAP eine antibolschewistische Ausstellung. Konzipiert vom Reichsministerium für Volksaufklärung und Propaganda (RMVP), wurde diese Ausstellung in allen großen Städten Deutschlands gezeigt. Nach der Unterzeichnung des deutsch-sowjetischen Nichtangriffspakts im August 1939 hörte die antibolschewistische Propaganda abrupt auf und wurde erst nach dem Beginn der Operation Barbarossa und dem Angriff Sowjetrußlands im Juni 1941 wiederaufgenommen.
  • Unbekannter (nicht indentifiziert), anonymer Künstler; Designer / Illustrator nicht genannt. Das Originalplakat gilt als gemeinfrei und als solche nicht urheberrechtlich geschützt.


English: "Bolshevism Unmasked / Bolshevism Without a Mask ; The Great anti-Bolshevik exhibition of the Nazi Party" (German original title: Bolschewismus ohne Maske Grosse antibolschewistische Ausstellung der NSDAP )
  • Poster created by the Waldheim Eberle A.G. company as advertisment for Bolschewismus ohne Maske, an anti-Bolshevik and anti-Semitic nazi party (NSDAP) propaganda exhibition held in Vienna, Austria 1938–1939.
  • Original exhibition illustration design from 1937 (see photos of the opening of the "Bolschewismus ohne Maske" exhibition in Berlin in November 1937)
  • Nazi propaganda; Anti-communism; etc.
  • Unidentified, anonymous artist; designer / illustrator not credited. The work / poster / postcard / illustration is considered to be in the public domain and, as such, not subject to copyright restriction.
  • Library of Congress Online Catalog : '
    • Title: Bolschewismus ohne Maske Grosse antibolschewistische Ausstellung der NSDAP. Wien, Nordwestbahnhalle, Dezember 1938 bis Februar 1939.
    • Summary: Advertising poster for an anti-Bolshevist exhibition of the Nazi party.
    • Created / Published: [Vienna] : Waldheim Eberle A.G. ; 1938.
  • UWDC UW-Madison Libraries : Not everyone who had read "Mein Kampf" took seriously the rabid outpouring of filth and hatred it contained. But in his own words, Hitler described how his eyes had been opened at an early age to the "two menaces" which threatened the existence of the German people: Communists and Jews. These two objects of his hatred would become, after his seizure of power, subjected unrelentingly to vicious propaganda and heinous persecution. That Marxism, or Bolshevism, was to Hitler a "doctrine of destruction" which itself must be destroyed for the survival of all Germans may be seen plainly in the picture on this official postcard from the Great Anti-Bolshevist Exhibit organized by Goebbels' Ministry for Public Enlightenment and Propaganda. "Bolshevism unmasked," reads the inscription over a world engulfed in red flame and branded with a hammer-and-sickle in the center of a yellow Jewish Star, recalling Hitler's rant in Mein Kampf that "in Russian Bolshevism we must see the attempt undertaken by the Jews in the twentieth century to achieve world domination!" A ghostly image of Death as an armed revolutionary clutches in both hands its weapons of destruction. The exhibition was held in Vienna in 1939. Six years earlier Communists had been among the first of those countless victims rounded up for the concentration camps.
Date
Source https://www.loc.gov/item/2009633646/ (Library of Congress Online Catalog)
Author Reich Ministry for Public Enlightenment and Propaganda (Reichsministerium für Volksaufklärung und Propaganda), Nazi Germany. Unidentified, anonymous artist; designer / illustrator not credited. Original poster created by the Waldheim Eberle A.G., Vienna company 1938. The work / poster / postcard / illustration is considered to be in the public domain and, as such, not subject to copyright restriction.
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current14:47, 1 October 2022Thumbnail for version as of 14:47, 1 October 2022631 × 849 (232 KB)Wolfmann (talk | contribs)Uploaded a work by Unidentified, anonymous artist; designer / illustrator not credited. Postcard of an original poster created by the Waldheim Eberle A.G. company for ''Bolschewismus ohne Maske'' ("Bolshevism unmasked"), a anti-Bolshevik and anti-Semitic (nazi party propganda exhibition held in Vienna, Austria 1938–1939. The work / poster / postcard / illustration is considered to be in the public domain and, as such, not subject to copyright restriction. (...

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