Boris Efimov Illustrations

125 Total

124 Online

DESCRIPTION

Boris Efimovich Efimov (born Fridland; 1900–2008) was a Soviet political caricaturist who, during his 80-year career, promoted Soviet policies and targeted domestic and international enemies of the regime. His cartoons were printed in the leading newspapers and magazines, including “Pravda,” “Izvestiya,” “Krasnaya Zvezda,” and “Krokodil”. During World War II, Efimov’s drawings appeared nearly daily and were popular in the trenches and throughout Russia, illustrating fascist savagery, ridiculing the Nazi leadership, and assuring his audience of Soviet might and ultimate victory. During the Cold War period, Efimov published caricatures about political events around the world, denouncing Western hypocrisy, imperialism, and aggression. A number of illustrations in this collection focus specifically on the topic of nuclear weapons. Drawings range in size from  8 x 11 to 14 x 18 inches.

PROVENANCE

The collection was acquired in 2007 from an anonymous ephemera dealer.

HIGHLIGHTS

"USSR," ca. 1988-1990

"USSR," ca. 1988-1990

"Press of the free world," ca. 1960s-1980s

"Press of the free world," ca. 1960s-1980s

Illustration against nuclear weapons, ca. 1980s

Illustration against nuclear weapons, ca. 1980s

"Change of road signs," 1944

"Change of road signs," 1944

"American football," 1981

"American football," 1981

"Nuclear thinking," 1984

"Nuclear thinking," 1984

FEATURED

"Raking it in," 1976

Item Record

Across his long career, Efimov drew caricatures of the nefarious, hidden intentions of Soviet enemies. This caricature depicts the South African apartheid government in cahoots with rapacious Western figures plundering the country of Namibia. Three capitalists—a British man in a bowler hat, an American cowboy figure, and a South African businessman—steal Namibia’s uranium, diamond, and nickel reserves. This caricature first appeared in the satirical magazine "Krokodil" No. 35 with the caption "The racist regime of the South African Republic not only illegally took over Namibia but also created the conditions enabling American, British, and other companies to plunder the natural resources of this country."

"Raking it in," 1976

FEATURED

"Usual dish in Hitler's headquarters," 1944

Item Record

Efimov published his first anti-Nazi cartoon in 1923 and consistently warned against the dangers posed by German fascism for the next two decades. This illustration from 1944, which first appeared in the magazine "Ogonek" (Little Flame), references the Red Army offensives of that year, which pushed the Wehrmacht out of Soviet territory. The Red Army, represented by the large, red bayonets, spear a pot of what by that time had become the “usual dish”: Wehrmacht soldiers surrendering and holding a white flag emblazoned with the words “Hitler kaput [Hitler is done].” The black kettle crushes a desk where Hitler, Goebbels, and Goering sit, sending them tumbling.

"Usual dish in Hitler's headquarters," 1944

FEATURED

"To break the 'vicious circle,'" 1985

Item Record

Efimov often liked to draw a collection of Soviet enemies, lining them up or placing them in a circle and exposing their collective vices. In this 1985 caricature, captioned “To break the vicious circle,” he drew a ring of familiar American types: generals, capitalists, and Uncle Sam. They dance in a vicious circle of militarism and imperialism, clutching weapons and documents labeled “Star Wars,” “politics from a position of strength,” “military orders,” “diktat,” and “global pretensions of the USA.” Viewers would be reassured, however, that Soviet hands have contained this warmongering group. Around these hands are the slogans of the Second World: “for peace,” “for disarmament,” “for the safety of all peoples.”

"To break the 'vicious circle,'" 1985
logo
  • Collections
  • Stories
  • Items
  • Veterans
  • Public Programs
  • About the Archive
  • Contact Us
Contact the Archive
info@blavatnikarchive.org+1 212 275 4600
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
Get the News

Join our mailing list to stay up to date on new collections, projects, and events

© All Rights Reserved to the Blavatnik Archive

logo
logo