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Transiberian Express
Small vintage poster advertises
"The Transsiberian Express" travel route and was commissioned by Intourist, the official Soviet state travel agency founded in 1929. It was produced in the 1930s, around 1930 or 1938, by an unknown artist (sometimes attributed to Max Litvak or P. Merinov depending on the source).
Poster Details

Purpose: The poster promoted the Trans-Siberian route as "The Shortest, Cheapest and Most Comfortable Route to the Far East" for Western tourists to attract foreign currency and project a positive image of the USSR.
Art Style: It employs a dynamic, Art Deco style popular in Western travel advertising of the time, rather than the Socialist Realism used for internal Soviet propaganda, to appeal to a foreign audience.
Content: The design features a stylized map with the railway line connecting European cities like London, Paris, and Berlin to Far Eastern destinations via Moscow, Khabarovsk, Vladivostok, and Harbin. A large, streamlined locomotive with a red star dominates the foreground.
Transiberian Express - Mounted (Poster)
Mounted
Transiberian Express (Poster)