Designer Desire: Emory Douglas

Montage of Emory Douglas poster designsall image credits: Emory Douglas

With the current resurgent interest in the Black Lives Matter movement. There’s been a lot of coverage of Black history and arts across the media. We caught a really interesting television documentary programme about the Black Panthers and it featured the poster art of Emory Douglas.

Douglas (b. 1943) was tasked with being ‘Revolutionary Artist’ and Minister of Culture for the Black Panther Party from 1967 until its dissolution in the 1980s. He created the artworks in the party’s Black Panther which, at one point, was the most widely read Black newspaper in the United States, boasting a weekly circulation of more than 300,000.

In addition to the newspaper, he created posters, postcards and flyers using his signature style – bold, black graphics, limited colour palette, moving slogans and often collage.

He’s the person that’s often credited with popularising the moniker ‘pigs’ for corrupt police officers:

In American culture, pigs are animals wallowing in filth and dirty. So I took that thought and applied it to the pig drawing itself. Then once I put the pig on two legs, gave it a badge and had the flies flying around, it transcended the boundaries of the African-American community and became an international icon that everybody identified with as a symbol of oppression by government and the police. NY Times

He has exhibited his work internationally, in museums & galleries such as Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (2007), Urbis, Manchester (2008) and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (2009).

Douglas received the 2015 medal from the American Institute of Graphic Arts (AIGA) – in recognition of “his fearless and powerful use of graphic design in the Black Panther party’s struggle for civil rights and against racism, oppression, and social injustice.”

There’s a book about the art of Emory Douglas that’s sometimes available on Amazon and Abe Books.

Check out the interview with Douglas at the bottom of this post which puts his work into historical and social context.

Black Panther: The Revolutionary Art of Emory Douglas

Portrait of Emory Douglascredit

Emory Douglas: The Art of The Black Panthers from Dress Code on Vimeo.

Designer Desire: Ruben Suryaninov

Ruben Suryaninov poster art collage

My first introduction to Soviet propaganda art and design was at university via one of my tutors. David Crowley is a cultural historian of Eastern Europe under communist rule and has published a number of books on and around the subject. Having finished watching (the absolutely brilliant) Chernobyl this week, I was thinking about the ideology, values and beliefs of communism.

Pro-communist agitprop posters were created and distributed on a large scale and there were a number of artists designing them from the 1920s onwards; Ruben Suryaninov (or Sur’yaninov) was one. Unfortunately, I couldn’t find much information about him – just the occasional paragraph in books. Suryaninov (b. 1930) attended the Academy of Riga and is the son of prominent Soviet artist, Vasily Sur’yaninov. Originally a film poster artist, Suryaninov shifted to designing political posters in the mid-1930s.

Subject matter encompassed themes such as productivity, health (or sanitation), safety, sport, farming & agriculture, war, national security and peace.

On the process of designing anti-smoking posters, Ruben Suryaninov observed:

…a scientific council would determine the topics and themes, an artistic director (redaktor) would assign the topic to a particular artist whose style was considered a good match… The aim was to produce a poster that would convey the message in a clear, correct manner.

Around 10 examples of his designs are held in archives at The University of Birmingham. There’s an online gallery of over 80 of his posters at Digital Soviet Art. Surprisingly, original Suryaninovposters come up for sale cheaply on eBay – sleepers, if you ask me!

Image credits:

Alembicrare books | Redbird Auction | Soviet Posters | Soviet Propaganda