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Brattleboro Man's Poster A Vision Of The Past

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  • Brattleboro Man's Poster A Vision Of The Past

    BRATTLEBORO MAN'S POSTER A VISION OF THE PAST
    By Nicole Orne, Reformer Staff

    Brattleboro Reformer (Vermont)
    October 22, 2007 Monday

    BRATTLEBORO -- Richard Langlois stands in his living room, gazing
    up admiringly at a piece of art that was intended only as propaganda
    when it was created during World War I.

    The piece is a framed poster portraying Lady Liberty wielding a sword
    with a small girl with olive skin and dark hair grasping her leg.

    He got the poster from an attic above an old general store in
    Townshend, where he and the current owner, Everett Childs, found
    roughly 25 similar posters, wrapped up and labeled with care.

    "Someone, when they first put them up, said, 'This is beautiful,'
    and decided to keep it," he said.

    All the posters were related to the war, many with themes depicting
    "daddy coming home," he said.

    Langlois framed the Volk print and gave it to his wife for Christmas.

    While it may not bring much money at an antiques fair, for Langlois,
    it's priceless.

    The caption reads: "They shall not perish," and urges Americans to help
    the American Committee for Relief in the Near East raise $30 million to
    help those suffering in Armenia, Greece, Syria and Persia (now Iran).

    A poster dated 1918 that seems to suggest that the United States had
    already sided with the Armenians during the conflict is an ironic
    and interesting find.

    For Langlois, though, the poster is more about the art then the
    political message. The artist was Douglas Volk, who Langlois says was
    "one of the foremost illustrators at the time."

    He admires the artist's interpretation of Lady Liberty, which
    he describes as "almost pornographically beautiful, almost too
    beautiful. But that was the type of way they painted."

    The controversial plight of the Armenians who were killed by the
    Ottoman Turks during World War I has cropped up again lately as
    Congress attempts to pass a resolution labeling the killings a
    genocide.

    Historians estimate that up to 1.5 million Armenians were killed.

    Scholars view it as the first genocide of the 20th century, but
    Turkey says that the toll has been inflated and that those killed
    were victims of civil war and unrest.

    "This is real art," he said. "Not art for the sake of art, but to
    accomplish a real life purpose."
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