Item #10509 ¡Victoria! . . . Destrucción Total del Fascismo. Taller de Gráfica Popular.

¡Victoria! . . . Destrucción Total del Fascismo

Mexico City: Taller de Gráfica Popular, 1945. Original color lithograph. 23 1/2 x 31 1/2 in. Printed in red and black with the image of a bayonet through the eye of a grotesque Hitler face, the Nazi war machine in flames, and Allied flags above, with the Soviet Union red star front and center. Near fine. Item #10509

The Taller de Grafica Popular was a leftist artists’ print collective founded in Mexico City in 1937, drawing inspiration from the likes of Jose Guadalupe Posada and Manuel Manilla, using art to advance revolutionary social causes. Producing handbills, posters, and banners, the workshop became a center for radical political activity and supported anti-militarism, organized labor, and opposition to fascism.

¡Victoria!, printed by former bus driver, butcher’s assistant, and Taller founding member Angel Bracho, stands as one of the highlights of the TGP. The full text translates as, “Victory! The artists of the Popular Graphics Workshop have united to celebrate all of the progressive workers and men of and of the world for the glorious victory of the Red Army and of the armies of all the nations united against Nazi Germany, the most important step toward the total destruction of fascism.” 

Three holdings found in OCLC as of March 2026, though we locate a forth at the Yale University Art Gallery.

Sold