homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Jobs, eyes and syphilis: creative posters from the 30s and 40s

Some great vintage public announcement posters to start off your day.

Mihai Andrei
February 13, 2017 @ 11:07 pm

share Share

“As old as creation: Syphilis is now curable” (1937), silkscreen, for the New York WPA Federal Art Project

 

“John is not really dull – he may only need his eyes examined” (1937), silkscreen, for the New York WPA Federal Art Project

 

By now, you’re probably asking yourself ‘What on Earth are these?!’. Well back in the 30s and 40s, the US launched a program called the Works Progress Administration (WPA) in an attempt to provide more jobs for people. So they asked anyone with an artistic inclination to contribute to a series of public service announcement posters, as you see above (and below).

They were largely based on Bauhaus traditions, the art school in Germany that combined crafts and the fine arts and was famous for the approach to design that it publicized and taught. The shapes are basic and the design is minimalistic, but each artist put his or her own style into each poster.

“Keep your fire escapes clear” (1937), silkscreen, for the Tenement House Department of the City of New York

 

Robert Lachenmann, “Don’t mix ’em” (1937), lithograph, for the Pennsylvania WPA Federal Art Project

 

Recently, a committee was formed to try and recover some of these posters. The WPA Recovery Program was created in 2001 to try and locate original copies of the 2000 posters made. They are noteworthy for both their artistic and historical value, and they open a pretty neat window in the past.

“In March read the books you’ve always meant to read” (1941), silkscreen, for the Illinois Library Project

 

“The Drama of the Heavens: Adler Planetarium” (1939), silkscreen, for the Chicago WPA Federal Art Project

 

 

share Share

This 5,500-year-old Kish tablet is the oldest written document

Beer, goats, and grains: here's what the oldest document reveals.

How a 1932 Movie Lawsuit Changed Hollywood Forever and Made Disclaimers a Thing

MGM Studios will remember Rasputin forever. After all, he caused them to lose a legal battle that changed the film industry forever.

In 1911, Einstein wrote a letter to Marie Curie, telling her to ignore the haters

The gist of it is simple: "ignore the trolls".

NASA accidentally rediscovers forgotten doomsday Cold War base in Greenland

The ambitious and top secret project was supposed to withstand a first strike by the Soviet Union, but it ultimately couldn't withstand nature's cold embrace.

These 5,000-year-old seals might have paved the way for the invention of writing (and the birth of history)

Researchers discover that ancient cylinder seals may hold the key to decoding undeciphered proto-cuneiform signs.

A medieval saga confirmed: DNA confirms Norway's "Well man" legend

A Norse saga, a man in a well, and a genetic study that confirmed a legend.

The wheel may have been invented in the Carpathian Mountains 6,000 years ago by miners

The wheel may have a more surprising origin story than you'd think.

These three Viking women elongated their skulls, and some men filed their teeth. But why?

The body modifications were more than just cosmetic, researchers say.

Even archaeologists don’t know which animal this Viking toy represents

Archaeologists are confused whether this is a bear, a pig, or an Icelandic dog.

Cocaine Found in 17th-century European Brains, 200 Years Earlier Than Thought

New research reveals early evidence of cocaine use in Europe, challenging historical assumptions.