Helft uns Siegen! zeichnet die Kriegsanleihe [Help us win! Subscribe to the War Loan]

Place Europe: Germany
Accession Number ARTV07323
Collection type Art
Measurement Overall: 72.7 x 95.2, 70.7 x 95.1 cm
Object type Poster
Physical description lithograph on two sheets
Maker Erler, Fritz
Unknown
Hollerbaum & Schmidt
Date made c 1917
Conflict First World War, 1914-1918
Copyright

Item copyright: Copyright expired - public domain

Public Domain Mark This item is in the Public Domain

Description

German First World War poster issued by the Government to promote the Sixth German War Loan. Designed by Fritz Erler (1868-1940) it features a three quarter portrait of a German soldier, staring into the distance, surrounded by barbed wire. His face is muddied from being in the trenches however an inner light is visible within his eyes. One of the official military painters for the Oberste Heeresleitung [Supreme Army Command] this propaganda poster is Erler's best known work. The image is taken from a part of a mural by Erler. It presents a heroic image of warfare and can be linked to the idea that in some way trench warfare would be morally cleansing. The image is positioned centrally with the title above and below printed in green in a gothic typeface. It translates from the German as ' Help us to win! Subscribed to the War Loan'. Fritz Erler (1868-1940) was a German painter, graphic designer and scenic designer. Although most talented as an interior designer, he is perhaps best remembered for several propaganda posters he produced during the First World War. His paintings were commissioned as war propaganda. Erler studied at Breslau and Paris before travelling to Italy and Germany. He settled in Germany where he founded the magazine 'Die Jugend'. During the First World War he produced several notable posters for the German government. He was fascinated by Norse legends, Grimms' fairy tales and Johann Gottfried Herder's 'Stimmen der Völker' , all of which had an impact on his subject-matter. In a long, prolific career he designed costumes and stage sets, stained glass, ceramics and book bindings. After the war, Erler was commissioned to produce several murals on public buildings.