Overview
- Artwork Title
- Avec ce "de Gaulle" la....
- Credit Line
- United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection
Physical Details
- Language
- French
- Classification
-
Posters
- Category
-
Political posters
- Object Type
-
Posters, French (lcsh)
- Physical Description
- Poster with text, "Avec ce "de Gaulle" la- vous ne prendrez rien, M.M rs.." The colors are black, red and blue with a white background. There is an image of a French sailor motioning to a man in a boat (Britannia) who has a fishing pole with an image of de Gaulle on the line. The poster was produced in France; circa 1940's. The poster is lined with linen.
- Dimensions
- overall: Height: 48.190 inches (122.403 cm) | Width: 32.500 inches (82.55 cm)
pictorial area: Height: 47.630 inches (120.98 cm) | Width: 30.500 inches (77.47 cm) - Materials
- overall : paper, ink, linen
Rights & Restrictions
- Conditions on Access
- No restrictions on access
- Conditions on Use
- No restrictions on use
Administrative Notes
- Legal Status
- Permanent Collection
- Provenance
- The poster was acquired by the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 2001.
- Record last modified:
- 2022-07-28 18:28:39
- This page:
- https://collections.ushmm.org/search/catalog/irn515139
Also in French political poster collection
The collection consists of posters produced in the 1940's in France with political content.
Date: approximately 1945
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Anti-British propaganda poster showing Churchill’s tentacles cut out of Africa and the Middle East
Object
Propaganda poster in French showing German global victories against the British Empire. The poster depicts Winston Churchill’s caricatured, disembodied head with 12 tentacles, several bloody and truncated, reaching out over Africa and the Middle East, and extending past the border toward America and Asia. On September 1, 1939, Germany invaded Poland. In response, Britain and France declared war on Germany two days later. On June 22, 1940, France signed an armistice agreement by which the Germans would occupy the northern half of France. After the armistice and occupation, German authorities began releasing propaganda to fuel the resentment many French people held towards the British. The bloody tentacles represent Britain’s military failures against Germany. In Norway, a combined French and British force failed to stop the German invasion and in Germany, where British armies were forced out of continental Europe. In Mers El Kebir, Algeria, the British navy attacked a neutral French fleet killing nearly 1,300 sailors and in Dakar, a combined British and Free French force failed to take the colonial outpost. In Libya-Egypt, the British were forced to withdraw and were besieged at Tobruk in Somalia, where the British Protectorate was taken by the Italians and Syria, and German forces briefly took control of the region.
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