. "Large poster on offwhite paper dominated by the image of a giant reddish orange, bare-chested, muscular male figure. He faces forward and his statuelike face has rectangles of cropped hair, black triangles for eyes, a rectangle for a nose, and a wide, open black mouth, as if shouting. The figure fills the upper 3/4 of the poster and with outstretched arms clutches the back collars of 2 downward slumping men. The angular faced man in his right hand wears a reddish budenovka with a Communist symbol, a hammer and sickle on a white 5-sided star. The round faced man in his left hand wears a reddish orange kepi with a Nazi symbol, a black swastika within a white circle. In the upper right corner are the artist’s name and a circular printer’s mark with a Fraktur letter G surrounded by German text. There is a vertical center crease and 3 horizontal creases; the reverse has stains.\n\nfront, upper right corner, black ink : K. GEISS / MÜNCHEN front, upper right corner, around edge of circle, red ink : R • SCHUMANN • GRAPH • WERKSTÄTTE • MÜNCHEN 2 • 50"@en . "The poster was acquired by the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 2004."@en . "Reichstag election poster with a giant figure of the German worker subduing Communists and Nazis"@en . "Social Democratic Party campaign poster issued for the November 6, 1932, Reichstag election in Germany. The striking Modernist design in orange and black is by Karl Geiss. The poster features a giant statuelike figure of the proletariat grasping the collars of two men, one with a hammer and sickle Communist Party cap and the other with a swastika National Socialist (Nazi) Party hat. The SDP was the major political party in Germany until 1932. No party won a majority in this 2nd election of 1932, but the Nazis received the largest vote percentage, 33%. This was the last democratic national election held in prewar Germany. On January 31, 1933, Adolf Hitler was appointed Chancellor."@en . . "irn522159" . "overall: Height: 44.125 inches (112.078 cm) | Width: 32.500 inches (82.55 cm)"@en . "No restrictions on access"@en . . "1932 October" . . .