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    • To live with his brother, Mikhail Koltsov

      Boris Efimov - Spartacus Educational
      • Inspired by the oratory of Leon Trotsky, he became a Bolshevik and from 1920 to 1921, Efimov designed posters and brochures for the communist organ Agitprop. In 1922 he moved to Moscow to live with his brother, Mikhail Koltsov, who helped him get a job as a cartoonist for Pravda.
      spartacus-educational.com/Boris_Efimov.htm
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  2. From 1920 to 1921, Yefimov designed posters and brochures for the communist organization Agitprop, finally moving to Moscow in 1922 after his brother, who worked as an editor for Pravda, offered him a job drawing political cartoons.

  3. In the early 1920s, Yefimov moved to Moscow where he met top Soviet officials such as Nikolai Bukharin, Pravda’s editor-in-chief, as well as Leon Trotsky, who was in charge of the Red Army.

  4. Jul 2, 2019 · In 1972, the venerable Soviet political caricaturist Boris Efimov wrote the introduction to an album of political cartoons that in turn accompanied a Moscow exhibition. For Efimov, who was born in 1900, and by that time was nearly synonymous with official Soviet propaganda, the introduction was in part an explanation of his life’s work.

  5. Kevin McNeer, an American documentary film maker living in Moscow recently made a documentary about the life of Boris Efimov, one of the most famous Russian political cartoonists of the 20th century. In this article, Kevin shares some of the insights he gained during his meetings with the artist.

  6. Jul 1, 2013 · He began working for the Bolsheviks during the Civil War in Ukraine, moved to Moscow in 1922, and worked for major Soviet publications until 1991. His work, as the article posits, helped to define Soviet visual culture and with it a form of visual Occidentalism.

    • Stephen M. Norris
    • 2013
  7. From 1920 to 1921, Efimov designed posters and brochures for Agitprop, finally moving to Moscow in 1922 after his brother, who worked as an editor for Pravda, offered him a job drawing political cartoons.

  8. From 1920 to 1921, Yefimov designed posters and brochures for the communist organization Agitprop, finally moving to Moscow in 1922 after his brother, who worked as an editor for Pravda, offered him a job drawing political cartoons.