Darracott, J., Loftus, B. Second World War Posters London: HMSO, 1972 (Reprinted 1981)

A well illustrated work that accompanied an exhibition of war posters at the Imperial War Museum. It was edited by Joseph Darracott, the head of the Art Department at the IWM, with many illustrations prefaced by a short introductory piece. Each of the colour poster illustrations, most of which are British (a reflection of the holdings of the IWM, which contains some 20-30,000 British posters) are accompanied by biographical information about the artist, and contextual information about the situation in which the posters were produced.

“Posters are not designed to last, rather, they are intended to catch the mood of the moment and turn it to advantage. … As we look at war posters, we see our modern world reflected.” [p9]

Waist Not Waste

Ministry of Food , Food Flash, 1943. (Imperial War Museum YouTube Channel)

Ministry of Food: Opening Night

I was priviledged to have a sneak peek at this exhibition last Wednesday (10th February), as we filmed the interview for BBC InsideOut in the exhibition, in front of the posters that are highlighted in the section with Patricia Routledge, from the opening night, with many “famous faces” commenting on what they thought of it. I’m looking forward to going back for a proper look before it closes on 3 January 2011.

“I think the graphics are incredibly bright and inspiring, so it’s not a drab wartime thing at all, and …. we need it… it’s not a historical exhibition, it’s a inspirational exhibition” Monty Don

“The exhibition is very clear about what was going on, and I’m very stunned by the graphics, the posters that were made during the time, which is something I didn’t expect” Valentine Warner

I often think about the way that my mother used her imagination to economically provide us with good meals, and of course the nation has never been healthier. And it’s very interesting seeing the posters telling us what to do from an economical point of view – we’re being told today to eat more vegetables and fruit and so on” Patricia Routledge

“The message of course, is the most important thing, and is timeless. The design work on the tea towels is gorgeous, and it’s so appropriate for now. The main thing is it’s so moving, the collective effort from the people and from the government, everyone was all lined up and facing the same way, and you feel that’s what we need now, we don’t need some people preaching at us, we need everyone doing it, and then it will make a difference.” Allegra McEvedy

The Ministry of Food (The Imperial War Museum)

A great video from the Imperial War Museum, for the newly launched exhibition “Ministry of Food“.  “During the Second World War, getting the most from your little plot of land was crucial. This film, produced by the Ministry of Agriculture in 1941, explains how to prepare an area of ground for growing your veg, and shows why not having space is simply no excuse.”

The Imperial War Museum can be found on Twitter, YouTube, Flickr and Facebook, so plenty of ways to follow the exhibits.

There’s a great bit of coverage in Culture 24, and I hadn’t realised until we came to the end of filming last Wednesday (for BBC Inside Out North East, interviewed by Linda Barker, don’t know when it’s going to be aired yet), that the exhibition hadn’t yet opened. The Museum has put on a display a number of it’s great Home Front posters, and a number of displays which attempt to “give a sense” of what life was like on the Home Front in the Second World War.

Weapons of Mass Communication

“In the 21st century we have become accustomed to mass communication developing to unbelievably sophisticated levels, yet a new exhibition at the Imperial War Museum shows how for a large part of the 20th century, the humble poster was the key means of influencing public opinion.

The exhibition explores this phenomenon by presenting hundreds of the most eye-catching and iconic posters used to sell war and attendant ideologies from WWI to the present day.

Running until March 31 2008 Weapons of Mass Communication mines the museums’ vast poster archive to present a snapshot of the ideas that have been used to both promote and oppose conflicts and political ideas. ”

Read full entry. The accompanying book: “War Posters: Weapons of Mass Communication” by James Aulich is beautifully produced, and some information remains online.

Telegraph: Posters

telegraph-postersSeventy years after the radio announcement that informed the nation that Britain was at war, Imperial War Museum London is mounting Outbreak 1939, a new special exhibition, which will explore the build-up to and preparations for war, from August 20. Terry Charman, senior Imperial War Museum Historian, describes some of the iconic posters from 1939.

Forties Frugality is Back

pretWe mentioned before that the Imperial War Museum is re-using posters from the Second World War to encourage us into good habits to get through the recession! Following the Twitter feed of Mrs Sew & Sew, the campaign is definitely being noticed! 

Sarah Mower, Prêt-à-rapporter: This week: Forties frugality, cardie codes and the new nudes, 14 Apr 2009

More of Interest?
My Google Alerts is bringing in the usual run of online stores jumping on the bandwagon and selling the Keep Calm items, but a few other interesting odds and ends: 

Imperial War Museum: Posters of Conflict

Imperial War Museum Posters of Conflict WebsiteImperial War Museum Poster Collection
Whilst researching my PhD I had great hopes of access to the Imperial War Museum’s poster collection, but was restricted to the few hundred in the onsite art collection (which are still an amazing collection) .

In 2002 however, Manchester Metropolitan University, under the leadership of James Aulich, received funding to digitise 10,000 posters from the collection. Digitised copies of the posters are available from the Imperial War Museum Collections online, and VADs (most subject to copyright/image rights, etc.).

Imperial War Museum recruits Mrs Sew and Sew

Mrs Sew and Sew on Twitter Mrs Sew and Sew Engages with New Technology
 
The other week I referred to the Imperial War Museum’s information ‘Top Tips for Tough Times‘, using advice from the 1940s to those of us stuck in the noughties recession. What they didn’t mention there (a trick missed, I feel), was that they had also set up a blog, and a Twitter feed… a real innovative use of modern technology to bring out relevant information from the 1940s. Anyone who thought my PhD was irrelevant… clearly wrong!  And having tracked down a number of public information shorts to use at conferences, the IWM is now uploading a number of great films to YouTube ! Listen to the creative agency: The Team talk about their work.

I love the start of this blog:

Hello m’ dears!

Mrs Sew&Sew here, reporting from the home front in 1943! The nice people at the Imperial War Museum (yes, it’s even around in our day) have given me a special typewriter, so I can send you telegrams from here. Don’t worry, we’ve set it up so your replies get sent through to me as well, so feel free to have a chat!…. I’ve heard there’s some kind of problem with the banks in 2009, so maybe some of these ideas will come in handy there too. Do let me know if you have any great ideas I can pass onto my neighbours. Or even if they’re not relevant in my time, let me know anyway, and I’ll pass them back to all the lovely people in your time.”

 

Advertiser’s Weekly, 4th April 1944, p.154 notes…
 
W.S.Crawford, Ltd invented the figure in order to humanise the ‘make-do-and-mend’ campaign. Made first appearance in the press on May 15, and will feature in forthcoming displays and posters. “Mrs Sew-and-Sew is a pleasant figure, rather like a ventriloquist’s dummy, with a cherubic smile. A wooden figure of her will be placed at the door of advice centres, inviting people to come in, and she will also appear in window displays and exhibitions. Copy for the first advert describes her as a ‘designing woman’. The campaign will then invite women to identify themselves with her domestic habits, and to follow her example in overcoming household difficulties.” 

British Library

Keep Calm and Carry On
A beautifully detailed entry by owentroy,  including all of the new police (Keep Calm inspired) posters… which I keep spotting when I don’t have a camera to hand!  
And the slogan has become so famous (in a way it never was in the Second World War), that it now has its own Wikipedia entry, and had been seen around Westminster, and compared to the anti-terrorism posters. See how many crazy variations have been created, all collated together on Flicrk!

Thesis is listed at the British Library

My thesis, available since June 2004 in the Library and RKE Centre at the University of Winchester, at the Imperial War Museum, and at the Mass Observation Archives, was requested by the British Library earlier this year for digitisation (they should have asked me, I have it on CD!), so can be seen on the computers at the British Library, St Pancras. Still surprised my thesis hasn’t been picked up more by the press, but then I’ve been abroad for most of the past 2 years, and only now getting back to grips with my research and looking at ways of publishing it…  although even whilst travelling I managed to complete a chapter for the London Transport Museum, and pre-trip wrote an article for the Second World War Experience Centre.

Symbols & Stereotypes: National Identity in European Poster Design 1914-1945 (2001)

“The illustrative poster as we know it today has its origins in the technological innovations of the nineteenth century. The poster has continued to evolve as a means of communication, propaganda and persuasion; in recent times, it has been appropriated as a medium by artists such as Barbara Kruger and Michael Peel, who have used it to parody and subvert the messages of the advertising industry and the state.

The rise of the nation state coincided with the growth of mass society. Rivalry between states, combined with the need to preserve the international balance of power, intensified the economic, political and military competition between the European powers. The poster was increasingly used to define a national position which aimed at ‘creating patriotic feelings and explaining the real meaning of current events.’ Poster imagery appealed to a nation’s history, culture and religion, its past heroes and military prowess, and to God and His saints. Successive campaigns to promote recruitment, defence loans and charity organisations stimulated the nation’s commitment to conflict while at the same time attempting to raise national morale. However, the creation of patriotic feelings could not be achieved without the vilification of the foe. Perceived national and racial stereotypes were caricatured in ruthless attacks on the enemy’s moral shortcomings.

With the outbreak of war in Europe in 1914, the political poster became witness to the crises in society that continued until 1945. The poster tells us of our origins, underlines our sense of self-worth, promotes our aims and aspirations, refines our prejudices. Not always flatteringly, it holds up a mirror to ourselves.”

This was a small exhibition held at the Imperial War Museum in 2001, utilising images from many different countries, and both wars. It was interesting to see that there were four images from the ‘Your Britain’ series, demonstrating how “an inter-war travel poster style was used unchanged during the war to around patriotic feelings for an idealised pastoral Britain, defined by the landscape of Southern Britain”, were all Newbould’s images. I find the ‘Your Britain’ series the most interesting because Frank Newbould’s style is in such contrast to Abram Games’s style!

Held at: Imperial War Museum