1994 Original Austrian Poster, Nie! (The 100 Best Posters Collection)
1994 Original Austrian Poster, Nie! (The 100 Best Posters Collection)
1994 Original Austrian Poster, Nie! (The 100 Best Posters Collection)
1994 Original Austrian Poster, Nie! (The 100 Best Posters Collection)
1994 Original Austrian Poster, Nie! (The 100 Best Posters Collection)

1994 Original Austrian Poster, Nie! (The 100 Best Posters Collection)

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Date: 1994
Size:
40.5 x 28.5 inches
Artist: Tadeusz Trepkowski
Printer: Toppan Printing Co.

About The 100 Best Posters Collection:
This poster was originally created by Tadeusz Trepkowski in 1952 for the International Peace Congress. This is an official reissue from 1994 from the collection The 100 best posters from Europe and the United States / 1945-1990.

"In describing the rationale behind this portfolio, Hiromichi Fujita, the President of Toppan Printing Co., explains in the introduction that, "the decision to publish The 100 Best Posters from Europe and the United States 1945-1990 was motivated by our earlier collection of Japanese reproductions published four years ago . . . the first collection was intended as a small contribution to the field of graphic design, which has enjoyed an inseparable relationship with the printing industry for many years now." The selection of posters in this collection were chosen by a panel consisting of Steven Heller, Alain Weill, Milton Glaser and Yusaku Kamekura. All posters chosen (...) were reproduced and were then donated to art museums and related educational institutions in 200 locations around the world. In addition to being forms of expression, these posters, which were created in the diverse social conditions that have prevailed since the end of World War II, truly serve as a testament to the age in which they were produced." (Source: swanngalleries.com)

About the poster: For the International Peace Congress in Vienna in 1952, Tadeusz Trepkowski found a simple, pure, and powerful image: the shape of a bomb with glowing red ruins inside of it. The dark sky grows lighter toward the bottom, where the text cries out: "Never Again!" This somber, dramatic image had a particularly strong impact in a world that had barely begun to rebuild itself after the ruins of war. (Source: The 100 best posters from Europe and the United States / 1945-1990, p.40)

This poster is in good condition and ready to be framed.