With his smooth, warm, ruddy face which radiated light in all
directions, Chairman Mao Zedong was a fixture in Chinese propaganda
posters produced between the birth of the People's Republic in 1949 and
the early 1980s.
Chairman Mao, portrayed as a stoic superhero (aka the Great Teacher, the
Great Leader, the Great Helmsman, the Supreme Commander), appeared in
all kinds of situations (inspecting factories, smoking a cigarette with
peasant workers, standing by the Yangzi River in a bathrobe, presiding
over the bow of a ship, or floating over a sea of red flags), flanked by
strong, healthy, ageless men and "masculinized" women and children
wearing baggy, sexless, drab clothing. The goal of each poster was to
show the Chinese people what sort of behavior was considered morally
correct and how great the future of Communist China would be if everyone
followed the same path toward utopia by uniting together.
This book brings together a selection of colorful propaganda artworks
and cultural artifacts from Max Gottschalk's vast collection of Chinese
propaganda posters, many of which are now extremely rare.