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  1. The Degenerate Art exhibition (‹See Tfd› German: Die Ausstellung "Entartete Kunst") was an art exhibition organized by Adolf Ziegler and the Nazi Party in Munich from 19 July to 30 November 1937.

  2. 8 cze 2020 · The Nazis began confiscating thousands of artworks from German museums. The “Degenerate Art” exhibition was thrown together in less than three weeks. It opened in a cramped, improvised gallery space in Munich just one day after the nearby Great German Art Exhibition.

  3. 25 lip 2015 · Known as “the Polish school” of poster design, these works, while stylistically diverse, can be recognized as part of a unified, and ultimately national, approach to poster art that reflected the soul of a population during a long period of repressive governance and political unrest. Origins.

  4. Nazi poster from 1936. The poster became an important medium for propaganda during this period. Combining text and bold graphics, posters were extensively deployed both in Germany and in the areas occupied. Their typography reflected the Nazis' official ideology.

  5. The Nazis staged a massive exhibition of “degenerate art” in Munich in 1937. Rather awkwardly, it drew more visitors than the exhibit of approved art. This poster announces the exhibition.

  6. Participants have viewed, classified, analysed and discussed 100 posters from the National Socialist period – part of a collection of around one thousand objects in the Graphic Design Collection at the Kunstbibliothek (Art Library) – Staatliche Museen zu Berlin.

  7. Selected from over a hundred examples gathered from across Europe, the seven posters in this exhibition target occupied France. Six of the posters exemplify Nazi attempts to recruit French soldiers to fight the Soviet Union; to lure French people to do war work in Germany; and to make known the “enemy”: Jews, capitalists, and Communists.

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