Place | Europe: United Kingdom |
---|---|
Accession Number | ARTV07201 |
Collection type | Art |
Measurement | Sheet: 31.5 x 20.3 cm |
Object type | Poster |
Physical description | photolithograph |
Maker |
Ministry of Information Unknown |
Place made | United Kingdom: England, Greater London, London |
Date made | c.1942 |
Conflict |
Second World War, 1939-1945 |
Copyright |
Item copyright: Copyright expired - public domain
|
Careless talk costs lives: "Be careful what you say & where you say it."
British Second World War cautionary poster issued by the Ministry of Information. It depicts two men speaking at a bar, which is made up of stylised Hitler faces. The image is in the top half of the poster with the text in black beneath. Both are set against a white background and framed with a bright red border. It was first published in February 1940 as a series of different designs relating to 'careless talk'. This one of a series of 'careless talk costs lives' posters by Cyril Kenneth Bird (1887-1965). Bird, who was a Punch cartoonist, took on the 'Fougasse' pseudonym in the First World War, after the French term for a small land mine 'which might or might not hit the mark'. Fougasse's 'careless talk costs lives' campaign was stunningly successful in the Second World War. His approach to the propaganda poster was based on overcoming three obstacles. He wrote:
'Firstly, a general aversion to reading any notice of any sort; secondly, a general disinclination to believe that any notice, even if it was read, can possibly be addressed to oneself; thirdly, a general unwillingness even so to remember the message long enough to do anything about it.'
In overcoming these obstacles, Fougasse used a simple approach: humour, simple stylisation and the uncomplicated communication of messages.