How Posters Helped Shape America and Change the World
One enthusiast’s collection, on exhibit at the Oakland Museum of California, offers a sweeping look at grass-roots movements since the 1960s
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Introduction
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As a student at Berkeley in the early 1960s, Michael Rossman (1939-2008) was a tireless activist, renowned for his part in organizing the Free Speech Movement. Rossman later taught science, wrote books and collected posters created by the vital social and political movements sweeping the nation since 1965. By the end of his life he’d amassed nearly 25,000 posters, on themes ranging from “Be-ins” to Black Power: an extraordinary window onto America’s grass-roots democratic discourse.
An exhibition of 68 posters drawn from Rossman’s collection—“All of Us or None”—is now at the Oakland Museum of California (an additional 1,273 may be viewed online). Here are a dozen highlights, all pre-1980.
Democratize Yellow Cab / Frank Rowe, artist / circa 1953 / 2010.54.2982
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Fist / Frank Cieciorka, artist / 1966 / 2010.54.1254
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New Year's Eve / Bonnie MacLean, artist / 1967 / 2010.54.782
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Human Be-in / Stanley Mouse, artist / 1967 / 2010.54.743
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Anti-Draft Week / Mark Morris, artist / 1970 / 2010.54.57
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Boycott Gulf / photo by B. Adjali / 1972 / 2010.54.226
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Nixon Impeaches / G. Duoos, Orbit Graphic Arts / 1974 / 2010.54.1171
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Stop Diablo Canyon / Public Media Center / 1979 / 2010.54.710
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Bring the Monster Down / Doug Lawler, East Bay Media / 1972 / 2010.54.1247
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Health Care is for People / Chicago Women's Graphics Collective / 1975 / 2010.54.1013
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Don't Call Me Sweetheart / Pam Valois, artist / 1978 / 2010.54.613
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Iran / Leah Statman—Gonna Rise Again Graphics / 1978 / 2010.54.1157
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