Capital
(Fac des Sciences)
Red screen-print on newsprint
50 x 65cm
Documented in: Camard #49; Imagination #55; Beauty #326b; Beaubourg #157; Artcurial #450/464
Online References:
25 Sunday Jan 2015
Posted in Fac des Sciences, Poster
Capital
(Fac des Sciences)
Red screen-print on newsprint
50 x 65cm
Documented in: Camard #49; Imagination #55; Beauty #326b; Beaubourg #157; Artcurial #450/464
Online References:
07 Wednesday Jan 2015
Posted in Uncategorized
Today, the terrible attack on the Charlie Hebdo office resulted in the deaths of 12 people – amongst them 80-year old Georges Wolinski (one of the founders of the magazine “L’Enrage” in May 1968).
In memorium to him, and the other victims of this brutal mass-murder – this is his front cover for “L’Enrage” no.7.
22 Monday Dec 2014
Posted in Uncategorized
You’ve probably noticed something of a hiatus in my postings to this blog. One of the main reasons is that I am currently in Paris (not a bad thing for either myself, or the purposes of this blog!).
During the course of my visit so far I’ve come across some very interesting new tracts (about 20 in all) – and am looking to pick up at least another 4 posters. So the next listings will be made from back home in Brisbane early in the new year – featuring some of these new items.
26 Wednesday Nov 2014
Posted in June 17-23 1968, Poster, Uncategorized
Red-green-blue split-fountain screen-print
49.5cm x 38.5cm
“For the defence of political liberties
Against the dissolution of 11 revolutionary movements
Against the expulsions, the arrests, the police raids
And all breaches of the freedom of opinion
For an independent and autonomous ORTF
For the benefit of the dismissed strikers, the imprisoned and expelled students
A LARGE EXHIBITION-SALE
of drawings, lithographs, posters, and books
will take place on 22-23 June and 29-30 June
All day, at
NEW PARIS FACULTY OF SCIENCES
(Hall of Wine)
The participating artists and writers will be present
together with their friends, singers, film-makers, actors, composers
EVERYONE
is asked to come in support of their gesture of solidarity”
This poster may not be the most visually exciting from May 1968, but it would seem to fill in some missing history. I have known for a while that a number of artists created works to be sold in support of the striking workers and protesting students (amongst them Karel Appel and Asger Jorn). But I had no idea how this was organised – and this looks very much like the answer!

26 Wednesday Nov 2014
Posted in Artist-produced, Internationale Situationniste, Poster
“Break the Frame which Smothers the Picture”
(June) Asger Jorn
This is one of 4 lithographs Asger Jorn (ex-Cobra, ex-Situationist International) produced to be sold in support of the student movement. The 4 were actually produced on a single sheet which was cut – hence the variable dimensions of every copy (the print size, though, is obviously consistent).
Colour lithograph
32.5 x 50cm
Documented in:
Gasquet p. 214; Beaubourg #264; Artcurial #593; Murs #184b
Online References:
Bienecke: BrSides Folio 2008 57
13 Monday Oct 2014
Posted in CMDO, Internationale Situationniste, May 20-26 1968, Tract, Worker
Tags
(Translated by Ken Knabb)
FOR THE POWER OF THE WORKERS COUNCILS
In the space of ten days workers have occupied hundreds of factories, a spontaneous general strike has brought the country to a standstill, and de facto committees have taken over many state-owned buildings. This situation — which cannot last, but must either extend itself or disappear (through repression or defeatist negotiations) — is sweeping aside all the old ideas and confirming all the radical hypotheses on the return of the revolutionary proletarian movement. The fact that the whole movement was actually triggered five months ago by a half-dozen revolutionaries of the “Enragés” group reveals even better how much the objective conditions were already present. The French example is already having repercussions in other countries, reviving the internationalism that is inseparable from the revolutions of our century.
The fundamental struggle is now between the mass of workers — who do not have direct means of expressing themselves — and the leftist political and labor-union bureaucracies which (even if merely on the basis of the 14% of the active population that is unionized) control the factory gates and the right to negotiate in the name of the occupiers. These bureaucracies are not workers’ organizations that have degenerated and betrayed the workers; they are a mechanism for integrating the workers into capitalist society. In the present crisis they are the main protection of this shaken capitalism.
The de Gaulle regime may negotiate — essentially (even if only indirectly) with the PCF-CGT [French Communist Party and the labor union it dominates] — for the demobilization of the workers in exchange for some economic benefits; after which the radical currents would be repressed. Or the “Left” may come to power and pursue the same policies, though from a weaker position. Or an armed repression may be attempted. Or, finally, the workers may take the upper hand by speaking for themselves and becoming conscious of goals as radical as the forms of struggle they have already put into practice. Such a process would lead to the formation of workers councils, making decisions democratically at the rank-and-file level, federating with each other by means of delegates revocable at any moment, and becoming the sole deliberative and executive power over the entire country.
How could the continuation of the present situation lead to such a prospect? Within a few days, perhaps, the necessity of starting certain sectors of the economy back up again under workers’ control could lay the bases for this new power, a power which everything is already pushing to burst through the constraints of the unions and parties. The railroads and printshops would have to be put back into operation for the needs of the workers’ struggle. New de facto authorities would have to requisition and distribute food. If money became devalued or unavailable it might have to be replaced by vouchers backed by those new authorities. It is through such a practical process that the consciousness of the deepest aspirations of the proletariat can impose itself — the class consciousness that lays hold on history and brings about the workers’ power over all aspects of their own lives.
Paris, 22 May 1968
COUNCIL FOR MAINTAINING THE OCCUPATIONS
03 Friday Oct 2014
Posted in Artist-produced, Poster
Tags
“In Action They Showed the Source of Their Beauty”
(June) Karel Appel
A number of artists produced lithographic posters to be sold to fund the student movement. Amongst them were 3 ex-members of the Cobra art movement: Asger Jorn (also an ex-member of the Situationist International), Pierre Alechinsky, and Karel Appel.
This poster by Appel in referring to the “beauty” of the students has been suggested to be playing on his own reputation as a painter of less-than-beautiful figures.
6 colour lithograph
60.5 x 78cm
Documented in: Beaubourg #237; Artcurial #580; Murs #182
23 Tuesday Sep 2014
Posted in Flyer, May 13-19 1968, Poster
Tags
“The Fist of No Return/The Point of No Return”
(May 19)
Personally I like puns – but puns in other languages are strange things indeed. To understand this flyer you need to know that in French “poing” (fist) and “point” (point) sound identical.
So this image of a revolutionary fist punching De Gaulle in the face both illustrates what the majority of the protesters in May 68 would like to see happen (whether metaphorically or literally!), and spells out that that things have progressed too far to go back to normal.
Red-brown offset flyer
13.5cm x 20cm
Documented in:
Mai 68 p.26; Gasquet p.29 ; Dobson #24 ; Peters #111+223 ; Beauty #155 ; Camard #148a ; Mesa p53; Wlassikoff p.26; Beauty #155 + 18b
Online Reference:
BNF
Zurich Museum of Design
(see Sources page for full details of references)
21 Sunday Sep 2014
Posted in May 6-12 1968, Servir le Peuple, Tract, UJC(ml)
Tags
(Translated in Schnapp Document 40)
AND NOW
TO THE FACTORIES!
Call to action by the UJC(m-l) and “Serve the People” Clubs
Anger is rumbling among the masses. A million out of work. Starvation wages. Fascist repression at Dassault Citroën, Simca, and in many other plants. The CRS against workers’ and peasants’ demonstrations in Le Mans, Radon, and Caen.
For several months now, popular revolts have been breaking out against the employers and Gaullism.
Everywhere the reformist party machines, the revisionist leadership of the PCF, and the bureaucratic leadership of the CGT have striven to break the mass movement in Rhodiaceta, at Schwartz-Hautmont, Aluvac, the ceramic factories of Alès, and in many other places. But more and more the CGT and the PCF organizers have been checkmated and unmasked by the mass movement. More and more the masses are becoming conscious of these maneuvers which aim at crushing the class struggle in the factories in order to canalize action in favor of reformist objectives and, above all, of parliamentary debates.
On the occasion of student demonstrations, with violent police repression, popular pressure made itself felt: on Monday and especially Tuesday, workers and young laborers came to demonstrate in the steets with the students. This worker participation reflects the deep-seated anger that exists among the broad masses of the working class against Gaullism, which is a regime of unemployment and misery, and against revisionism, which is a reactionary trick for demobilizing
the masses.
The masses want to fight against Gaullism.
On the question of street demonstrations, their slogans, and their itineraries: from now on we must take up the fight against the obstacles erected by the reformlsts, we must help the masses to overcome these and to clear a way towards the revolutionary class struggle.
Three reactionary forces have leagued together in order to repress and check the revolutionary mass movement.
Gaullism has repeatedly hurled its aggressive troops against the populace, the students, and the workers.
The social democrats (PSU, SFIO, Trotskyites, and the executive commlttee of the UNEF) were quick to try to turn the student movement to account. Their goals are to keep the students isolated from the working class and limit the movement to reformist objectives: “structural reforms for the University, openings for young cadres, etc. These objectives are reflected in the reactionary political line followed these past days by the UNEF officers: at all costs keep the students in the Latin Quarter, limit slogans to absurd student demands, incapable of uniting students with the broad masses of workers and peasants.
The revisionists of the PCF and of the CGT leadership began by brutally attacking the student movement, revealing their true counter-revolutionary nature. The anger of the masses exploded against these traitors, who are police accomplices. Frightened, they have retreated a bit and rallied to the operation of their social democratic friends to limit the movement’s objectives to the three points laid down by the UNEF officers. That is, the revisionists pretend that the workers are demonstrating for academic freedoms.
This is not true: the workers are demonstrating because they want to fight against Gaullism, a regime of unemployment and misery, because they want to make an end to repression. One flag only can unite the broad masses of workers, poor peasants, and students:
The overthrow of Gaullism.
The conquest of freedom for the broad masses of the people.
Control over the exploiters
Let us sweep away the reformist slogans, which are purely academic, as well as the small revisionist and social democratic groups who are working together in an attempt to prevent us from having access to the masses of the people and to the revolution!
We must leave the bourgeois neighborhoods, which are not our concern. We must go to the factories and to the working class neighborhoods to join with the workers.
DOWN WITH GAULLISM
FREEDOM FOR THE MASSES OF THE PEOPLE!
UJC (m-l) , Cercles “Servir le Peuple” Tuesday, May 7, 1968.
21 Sunday Sep 2014
Posted in Atelier Populaire, May 20-26 1968, Poster
Tags
The Struggle Continues
(20/29 May 1968 – Atelier Populaire)
Brown-black screen-print on salmon paper
38.5cm x 56.5cm
Documented in:
Gasquet p. 188; Beaubourg #185; Imagination #13; Wlassikoff p.84; Camard #39bis; Camard #67; Artcurial #363; Dobson #174, UUU p. 18, Les Affiches #29+30; Peters #103 ; Beauty #11; Mesa p83 ; Murs #133
Online References:
ENSBA # 10522
BNF
Zurich Museum of Design