Obama’s Posters: Message in the Image
Posted by wordforit on April 16, 2008
It’s extremely difficult to understand why everyone isn’t completely “creeped-out” by the obviously ominous undercurrents, compunded with un American leanings, that have surfaced about Obama and his dirty associations. It’s like little kids who might run away from home because they don’t like the “rules” but want all the priveleges to remain in their grasp, while plotting to destroy the family.
Kudos to Peggy Shapiro for the poster background and comparison. Please pay attention!
~WordforIt
There is something unsettling and very familiar in the Obama poster campaign which has plastered his image over the country. The posters depict the same graphic closeup of the candidate with one block word either “Hope,” “Change” or “Progress” at the bottom. I knew that I had seen this before, and then it came to me that this image appropriates the graphic style of totalitarian Soviet propaganda. It recalls the idealized portraits and personality cult of the “Beloved Leader” such as Stalin and Lenin. The leader, face illuminated by a “holy” light, looks off to the horizon and sees the truth that is not available to his mere mortal followers, who must look up to his image.
Perhaps the common ground between Obama and Fairy is not only technique, but message. Fairy’s other work romanticizes revolutionary/terrorist figures. Obama’s association with figures such William Ayers, who boasted of a dozen bombings between 1970 and 1974, has been reported often. Obama was among only 22 Senators who opposed an amendment designating Iran’s Revolutionary Guards Corps a foreign terrorist organization. (Unlike the other 21, however, Obama missed the vote.) Fairy’s art also reflects a common theme of the Obama campaign: America is a nation that oppresses. It is the America in which Obama’s wife Michelle can take no pride and that Obama’s spiritual adviser damns. It is the vision of America and its place in the world by one who is unfamiliar with history and who has the luxury of American freedom to express his distain for the country.
What is then unsettling about the Obama poster campaign is that it may be perfectly suited for a man whose candidacy is based on a personality cult, who promises overly simplistic remedies for complex issues, and who seems to have more respect for America’s critics than for the nation he hopes to lead.