Zürcher Nachrichten - Against Type: Russian print artist makes posters for peace

EUR -
AED 4.229542
AFN 75.432903
ALL 95.673329
AMD 434.159272
ANG 2.0616
AOA 1056.088321
ARS 1600.037833
AUD 1.67083
AWG 2.073309
AZN 1.948243
BAM 1.952178
BBD 2.314426
BDT 140.998406
BGN 1.968574
BHD 0.435883
BIF 3420.484544
BMD 1.151678
BND 1.480022
BOB 7.940268
BRL 5.943125
BSD 1.149078
BTN 107.036416
BWP 15.76482
BYN 3.404942
BYR 22572.894635
BZD 2.311032
CAD 1.605802
CDF 2654.618598
CHF 0.922253
CLF 0.02683
CLP 1059.39415
CNY 7.926598
CNH 7.931632
COP 4224.839701
CRC 534.701008
CUC 1.151678
CUP 30.519475
CVE 110.561488
CZK 24.525791
DJF 204.676064
DKK 7.473017
DOP 70.079416
DZD 153.596456
EGP 62.613641
ERN 17.275174
ETB 179.432426
FJD 2.595657
FKP 0.87241
GBP 0.872943
GEL 3.092212
GGP 0.87241
GHS 12.674256
GIP 0.87241
GMD 85.224041
GNF 10111.735079
GTQ 8.790691
GYD 240.503795
HKD 9.025876
HNL 30.524573
HRK 7.538767
HTG 150.815609
HUF 384.449823
IDR 19572.772669
ILS 3.605185
IMP 0.87241
INR 107.081324
IQD 1505.407027
IRR 1519265.219025
ISK 144.397379
JEP 0.87241
JMD 181.163103
JOD 0.816577
JPY 183.971327
KES 149.491314
KGS 100.713996
KHR 4595.35456
KMF 491.766833
KPW 1036.505563
KRW 1739.667758
KWD 0.35626
KYD 0.957623
KZT 544.519756
LAK 25302.824774
LBP 103077.556215
LKR 362.553652
LRD 210.858795
LSL 19.526796
LTL 3.400607
LVL 0.696639
LYD 7.34843
MAD 10.79587
MDL 20.219014
MGA 4804.045368
MKD 61.662483
MMK 2418.327165
MNT 4114.67681
MOP 9.276889
MRU 45.649316
MUR 54.048423
MVR 17.805197
MWK 1992.486051
MXN 20.579113
MYR 4.647079
MZN 73.649928
NAD 19.526373
NGN 1586.744956
NIO 42.280639
NOK 11.261919
NPR 171.256039
NZD 2.023556
OMR 0.443888
PAB 1.149068
PEN 3.975524
PGK 4.970692
PHP 69.359772
PKR 320.627134
PLN 4.277713
PYG 7433.273632
QAR 4.189827
RON 5.097447
RSD 117.45529
RUB 92.557209
RWF 1678.271739
SAR 4.323634
SBD 9.258079
SCR 16.611798
SDG 692.158588
SEK 10.916822
SGD 1.482176
SHP 0.864057
SLE 28.388965
SLL 24150.130531
SOS 656.678816
SRD 43.016278
STD 23837.415533
STN 24.454206
SVC 10.054346
SYP 127.419337
SZL 19.518871
THB 37.625302
TJS 11.014066
TMT 4.042391
TND 3.387615
TOP 2.772964
TRY 51.350339
TTD 7.795638
TWD 36.828393
TZS 2994.363368
UAH 50.326193
UGX 4311.001822
USD 1.151678
UYU 46.533666
UZS 13961.098053
VES 545.193566
VND 30335.206361
VUV 137.053299
WST 3.185856
XAF 654.736586
XAG 0.015928
XAU 0.000249
XCD 3.112468
XCG 2.070958
XDR 0.81616
XOF 654.747935
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.848455
ZAR 19.543963
ZMK 10366.482797
ZMW 22.205994
ZWL 370.839942
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • CMSD

    0.1100

    22.26

    +0.49%

  • NGG

    1.1500

    87.99

    +1.31%

  • VOD

    0.0800

    15.21

    +0.53%

  • BCE

    -0.9300

    24.45

    -3.8%

  • RELX

    0.3600

    33.59

    +1.07%

  • CMSC

    0.0500

    22.04

    +0.23%

  • BTI

    0.3900

    58.28

    +0.67%

  • RYCEF

    0.9000

    15.99

    +5.63%

  • GSK

    0.7000

    56.69

    +1.23%

  • JRI

    0.0900

    12.61

    +0.71%

  • RIO

    -0.3600

    94.45

    -0.38%

  • BCC

    -1.8800

    73.2

    -2.57%

  • AZN

    2.7600

    203.49

    +1.36%

  • BP

    0.9500

    47.12

    +2.02%

Against Type: Russian print artist makes posters for peace
Against Type: Russian print artist makes posters for peace / Photo: Kirill KUDRYAVTSEV - AFP

Against Type: Russian print artist makes posters for peace

Before the launch of Russia's military campaign in Ukraine, printer Sergei Besov was part of a burgeoning art scene centred around in a converted factory in northern Moscow.

Text size:

Using an old printing press with hefty wooden Cyrillic type and vintage red ink, Besov created nostalgia-tinged posters with updated Soviet-style slogans.

More than three months after Russian forces moved into Ukraine in late February, Besov is still working, but these days his posters are about more than witty catchphrases.

"Everyone Needs Peace," reads one of his latest creations, hanging over the entrance to his Partisan Press poster workshop.

Besov, 45, gained instant attention when, in the early days of Russia's military offensive he started printing "No to War" posters in the shop.

One video of a poster being made garnered 3.6 million views on Instagram.

"It was unclear whether martial law was going to be introduced... Everyone was in a panic," he says.

Besov stopped making the "No to War" posters after Russia introduced strict new censorship laws, making it illegal to refer to the intervention as a war and setting jail terms for those found guilty of discrediting Russia's military.

He began printing the "Everyone Needs Peace" posters instead but the police still turned up at this shop in early March and detained two of his employees.

- 'They talk about fear' -

"They were very nervous," he says. The two women are now waiting to know whether they will face any charges.

The workshop took a few weeks off in March "simply out of fear", Besov says, but is now up and running again.

On one recent spring day, Besov was out in the streets of Moscow in sunglasses and a black T-shirt, using a paint brush to slather glue on one of his posters in front of a brick wall covered with graffiti.

Once the glue was applied, he stuck up the poster reading: "If there are dreams, there will be journeys."

Tens of thousands of Russians have decided to take one-way journeys since the start of the conflict, fleeing the country with no plans to return.

But Besov says he plans to stay.

"Today the posters are about what happens to us. They talk about fear. 'Fear is no reason not to act' was the first poster we printed after our break," he says.

The posters' slogans are vague and eerie, loaded with the words that cannot be said: "The wave will sweep everything away", "The main thing is not to lose yourself", "Every wall has a door".

One reads simply "Cognitive Dissonance" -- a reference, Besov says, to how many in Moscow are living their normal lives while "our friends over there (in Ukraine) are suffering.

"And even worse, we understand that everyone is getting used to it."

Despite his passion for his work, Besov is not sure how long he can keep his shops running or printing the posters.

His main business is printing high-end stationery and business cards at another nearby workshop under the imprint Demon Press. But under Western sanctions, the fine paper he uses for the business will soon be impossible to find in Moscow.

And the vintage red ink he uses for his posters -- made in the Soviet-dominated Hungarian People's Republic in 1989 -- will also soon run dry.

D.Smith--NZN