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Nina Vatolina

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In the decades after the war, Vatolina produced posters to promote a variety of government initiatives, including those related to agriculture, children's lives and education, health and eugenics, industrialization and post-war reconstruction, international relations, and the development of
119: 158:. The two would collaborate on posters for the duration of their marriage. Following her graduation, Vatolina returned to Moscow to produce posters, despite discouragement from authorities given the wartime conditions in the region. 222:, who donated a number of Soviet posters, among them Vatolina's, to the Tate Modern. Her posters were also featured in the Tate's 2017 exhibit, "Red Star Over Russia: A Revolution in Visual Culture 1905–55". 99:(1915–2002) was a Soviet Russian poster artist. Active from the late 1930s into the 1960s, she has been called "formidably prolific" and credited with "some of the best" Soviet poster design in the era. 207:
Towards the end of her life, Vatolina said in interviews that she had always preferred painting over her post-World War II poster work, which she had produced out of obligation rather than passion.
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Goscilo, Helen (2022). "From Double-Voiced to Univocal: Devious, Desirous, and Declarative Childhoods in Soviet Posters". In Balina, Marina; Rudova, Larissa V.; Kostetskaya, Anastasia (eds.).
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from 1935 to 1939. She had married Deni's son, Nikolai Denisov, in 1934, and the two studied together at the Moscow Art Institute while it was evacuated to
201: 496: 640: 165:, she and Denisov produced a number of posters for authorities. Her two most famous images, both produced in 1941 may be "Ne Boltai!" (English: 718: 181:, with the art undergoing edits to better represent Azerbaijani women. She continued to also work on posters promoting political unity and 803: 798: 462: 177:. The poster featured a defiant woman based on Vatolina's neighbor. It was reprinted in 1942 to address a potential Nazi invasion of 130: 173:), which discouraged gossip to protect national security, and "Fascism, the Most Evil Enemy of Women", produced in reaction to the 793: 352: 623: 596: 540: 308: 278: 692: 613: 268: 530: 298: 218:
In the English-speaking world, Vatolina's posters were brought to light by British graphic designer and art collector
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Vatolina began making posters in the late 1930s, some of which encouraged participation in elections. During
808: 558:"Stalin Takes Care of Each of Us from the Kremlin: Obligation and Gratitude in Stalinist Political Posters" 357: 107: 818: 591:. Children's literature and culture. New York, London: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group. 788: 783: 666: 174: 8: 324: 719:"Red Star Over Russia: A Revolution in Visual Culture 1905–55 review – a momentous show" 557: 726: 619: 592: 569: 536: 504: 304: 274: 589:
Historical and cultural transformations of Russian childhood: myths and realities
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Historical and Cultural Transformations of Russian Childhood: Myths and Realities
641:"'The Wayland Rudd Collection': When state power was harnessed to combat racism" 55: 777: 730: 573: 508: 497:"Nina Vatolina's Fascism, the Most Evil Enemy of Women: stirring propaganda" 267:
Balina, Marina; Rudova, Larissa; Kostetskaya, Anastasia (30 November 2022).
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Tankograd: The Formation of a Soviet Company Town: Cheliabinsk, 1900s–1950s
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The Art of Feminism: Images that Shaped the Fight for Equality, 1857–2017
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Gosling, Lucinda; Robinson, Hilary; Tobin, Amy (25 December 2018).
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She had solo exhibitions of her work in Moscow in 1957 and 1968.
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Vatolina's 1941 poster, "Ne Boltai!" ( "Don't chatter!
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In 1945, Vatolina divorced Denisov and married painter
296: 693:"If You Have a Revolution, You Gotta Have Posters" 535:(Revised ed.). Chronicle Books. p. 73. 775: 353:"COMMUNISM IS THE START OF THE SOVIET UNION" 611: 350: 129: 117: 716: 664: 586: 528: 494: 776: 690: 638: 463:"Ватолина Нина Николаевна (1915–2002)" 555: 457: 455: 453: 407: 405: 403: 401: 399: 397: 395: 273:. Taylor & Francis. p. 100. 490: 488: 486: 484: 451: 449: 447: 445: 443: 441: 439: 437: 435: 433: 393: 391: 389: 387: 385: 383: 381: 379: 377: 375: 292: 290: 262: 260: 150:(1937–1942). She also studied under 717:Cumming, Laura (12 November 2017). 639:Gordon, Eric A. (4 February 2022). 529:Reckitt, Helena (1 November 2022). 13: 804:20th-century Russian women writers 799:20th-century Russian women artists 14: 850: 691:Heller, Steven (22 August 2012). 495:Sherwin, Skye (8 December 2017). 481: 430: 372: 287: 257: 87:Max Avadevich Birshtein (m. 1945) 16:Soviet poster artist (1915–2002) 744: 710: 684: 667:"An Object Not Meant to Object" 658: 632: 605: 580: 303:. Chronicle Books. p. 68. 225: 612:Samuelson, L. (26 July 2011). 549: 522: 344: 317: 185:for the remainder of the war. 144:Ogiz Technical School for Arts 134:Stamp featuring Vatolina's art 1: 794:20th-century Russian painters 413:"Vatolina, Nina Nikolaevicha" 250: 238:Walking the Tretiakov Gallery 665:Samudzi, Zoé (6 June 2022). 113: 66:2002 (aged 86–87) 7: 210: 84:Nikolai Denisov (1934–1945) 10: 855: 358:Victoria and Albert Museum 200:. According to art critic 108:Victoria and Albert Museum 97:Nina Nikolaevicha Vatolina 618:. Springer. p. 254. 325:"Nina Vatolina 1915–2002" 77: 62: 37: 30: 23: 102:Her work is held at the 32:Нина Николаевна Ватолина 31: 562:Новейшая история России 351:Vatolina, Nina (1965). 190:Max Avadevich Birshtein 175:Nazi invasion of Russia 814:Russian women painters 142:in 1915. She attended 135: 127: 834:Soviet women painters 824:Soviet poster artists 138:Vatolina was born in 133: 121: 839:Soviet women writers 829:Soviet women artists 244:Landscapes of Moscow 148:Moscow Art Institute 146:(1932–1936) and the 126:borders on treason") 809:People from Kolomna 532:The Art of Feminism 556:Pisch, A. (2013). 467:tramvaiiskusstv.ru 202:Evgeny Peremyshlev 136: 128: 625:978-0-230-31666-9 598:978-1-003-27422-3 542:978-1-7972-2038-3 310:978-1-4521-7001-5 280:978-1-000-78067-3 94: 93: 846: 768: 767: 765: 763: 758:. 14 August 2017 748: 742: 741: 739: 737: 714: 708: 707: 705: 703: 688: 682: 681: 679: 677: 662: 656: 655: 653: 651: 636: 630: 629: 609: 603: 602: 584: 578: 577: 553: 547: 546: 526: 520: 519: 517: 515: 492: 479: 478: 476: 474: 459: 428: 427: 425: 423: 409: 370: 369: 367: 365: 348: 342: 341: 339: 337: 321: 315: 314: 294: 285: 284: 264: 48: 46: 21: 20: 854: 853: 849: 848: 847: 845: 844: 843: 819:Soviet painters 774: 773: 772: 771: 761: 759: 750: 749: 745: 735: 733: 715: 711: 701: 699: 689: 685: 675: 673: 671:Jewish Currents 663: 659: 649: 647: 637: 633: 626: 610: 606: 599: 585: 581: 554: 550: 543: 527: 523: 513: 511: 493: 482: 472: 470: 461: 460: 431: 421: 419: 411: 410: 373: 363: 361: 349: 345: 335: 333: 323: 322: 318: 311: 295: 288: 281: 265: 258: 253: 228: 213: 116: 90: 73: 67: 58: 49: 44: 42: 33: 26: 17: 12: 11: 5: 852: 842: 841: 836: 831: 826: 821: 816: 811: 806: 801: 796: 791: 786: 770: 769: 743: 709: 697:PRINT Magazine 683: 657: 645:People's World 631: 624: 604: 597: 579: 548: 541: 521: 480: 429: 371: 343: 316: 309: 286: 279: 255: 254: 252: 249: 248: 247: 241: 235: 232:We Are Posters 227: 224: 212: 209: 171:Don't Chatter! 115: 112: 92: 91: 89: 88: 85: 81: 79: 75: 74: 68: 64: 60: 59: 56:Russian Empire 50: 39: 35: 34: 28: 27: 24: 15: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 851: 840: 837: 835: 832: 830: 827: 825: 822: 820: 817: 815: 812: 810: 807: 805: 802: 800: 797: 795: 792: 790: 787: 785: 782: 781: 779: 757: 753: 747: 732: 728: 724: 720: 713: 698: 694: 687: 672: 668: 661: 646: 642: 635: 627: 621: 617: 616: 608: 600: 594: 590: 583: 575: 571: 567: 563: 559: 552: 544: 538: 534: 533: 525: 510: 506: 502: 498: 491: 489: 487: 485: 468: 464: 458: 456: 454: 452: 450: 448: 446: 444: 442: 440: 438: 436: 434: 418: 417:Poster Plakat 414: 408: 406: 404: 402: 400: 398: 396: 394: 392: 390: 388: 386: 384: 382: 380: 378: 376: 360: 359: 354: 347: 332: 331: 326: 320: 312: 306: 302: 301: 293: 291: 282: 276: 272: 271: 263: 261: 256: 245: 242: 239: 236: 233: 230: 229: 223: 221: 216: 208: 205: 203: 199: 193: 191: 186: 184: 180: 176: 172: 168: 164: 159: 157: 153: 149: 145: 141: 132: 125: 120: 111: 109: 105: 100: 98: 86: 83: 82: 80: 76: 71: 65: 61: 57: 53: 40: 36: 29: 25:Nina Vatolina 22: 19: 760:. Retrieved 755: 746: 734:. Retrieved 723:The Observer 722: 712: 700:. Retrieved 696: 686: 674:. Retrieved 670: 660: 648:. Retrieved 644: 634: 614: 607: 588: 582: 568:(8): 37–54. 565: 561: 551: 531: 524: 512:. Retrieved 501:The Guardian 500: 471:. Retrieved 469:(in Russian) 466: 420:. Retrieved 416: 362:. Retrieved 356: 346: 334:. Retrieved 328: 319: 299: 269: 243: 237: 231: 226:Publications 217: 214: 206: 194: 187: 170: 166: 163:World War II 160: 137: 101: 96: 95: 18: 789:2002 deaths 784:1915 births 167:Don’t Talk! 152:Viktor Deni 104:Tate Modern 778:Categories 251:References 220:David King 179:Azerbaijan 762:24 August 736:24 August 731:0029-7712 702:24 August 676:24 August 650:24 August 574:2219-9659 514:24 August 509:0261-3077 473:24 August 422:24 August 364:24 August 336:24 August 183:Stalinism 156:Samarkand 124:Gossiping 114:Biography 211:Exhibits 106:and the 72:, Russia 198:Siberia 140:Kolomna 78:Spouses 52:Kolomna 43: ( 729:  622:  595:  572:  539:  507:  307:  277:  246:(1983) 240:(1976) 234:(1962) 70:Moscow 764:2024 756:Huck 738:2024 727:ISSN 704:2024 678:2024 652:2024 620:ISBN 593:ISBN 570:ISSN 537:ISBN 516:2024 505:ISSN 475:2024 424:2024 366:2024 338:2024 330:Tate 305:ISBN 275:ISBN 63:Died 45:1915 41:1915 38:Born 169:or 110:. 780:: 754:. 725:. 721:. 695:. 669:. 643:. 564:. 560:. 503:. 499:. 483:^ 465:. 432:^ 415:. 374:^ 355:. 327:. 289:^ 259:^ 192:. 54:, 766:. 740:. 706:. 680:. 654:. 628:. 601:. 576:. 566:3 545:. 518:. 477:. 426:. 368:. 340:. 313:. 283:. 47:)

Index

Kolomna
Russian Empire
Moscow
Tate Modern
Victoria and Albert Museum

Gossiping

Kolomna
Ogiz Technical School for Arts
Moscow Art Institute
Viktor Deni
Samarkand
World War II
Nazi invasion of Russia
Azerbaijan
Stalinism
Max Avadevich Birshtein
Siberia
Evgeny Peremyshlev
David King


Historical and Cultural Transformations of Russian Childhood: Myths and Realities
ISBN
978-1-000-78067-3


The Art of Feminism: Images that Shaped the Fight for Equality, 1857–2017
ISBN

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