"WOMEN AS PRODUCERS AND CONSUMERS: Joseph Stalin's first Five-Year Plan (1928-1932), which aimed to increase industrial productivity and the construction of public infrastructure, created an urgency for Soviet women to enter the workforce. A campaign for a 'new everyday life' (novyi byt), in which the state would provide services such as childcare, cafeterias, and public laundries, sought to free women from domestic duties and enable them to work outside the home, in factories and communal farms, for example. Central to this initiative was the creation of posters, often by women artists assigned to the theme, representing new ways female citizens could be producers and consumers in Soviet society. These artists sought to reach a wide public as they shaped the socialist ideal of gender equality."
Valentina Kulagina, Russian, Maquette for We are Building - Stroim. 1929. "In 1929, no skyscrapers had yet been built in the Soviet Union. Nevertheless, Kulagina created an aspirational vision of Soviet architecture. With 'We are building' spanning the cityscape, this maquette promoted Stalin's First Five-Year Plan (1928-32), which supported public infrastructure projects as part of a program to increase the nation's industrial productivity. Kulagina combined printed images of American architecture, such as the Detroit skyscraper at right, with hand-drawn elements, and inserted sandpaper to suggest the texture of concrete."
Liubov Popova, Russian. "Long Live the Dictatorship of the Proletariat!". 1923. Set design for the play 'Earth in Turmoil.'
Natalia Pinus, Russian, "Women Workers, Women Collective Farmers, Be in the Front Lines of Fighters for the Second Five-Year Plan for Building a Classless, Socialist Society!" 1933.
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