
If You Swear Love to Children, Don't Poison Them with Smoke and Toxins!
Tatyana Ivanovna Dmitrieva, 1991

- Medium
- Silkscreen/paper
- Dimensions/
- 119 H x 72 W
- Country
- Russian SFSR
- Condition
- A | Excellent - Minimal to no signs of wear

Complimentary global shipping or collect from our gallery

"If You Swear Love to Children, Don't Poison Them with Smoke and Toxins!" (1991) by Tatiana Ivanovna Dmitrieva marks a decisive break from traditional industrial triumphalism. Created during a period when glasnost policies enabled direct criticism of industrial pollution, the work represents a significant departure from earlier Soviet aesthetic and ideological approaches.
The composition centers on a haunting figure of a child in a gas mask, wearing mint-green protective gear against a dark background. The figure beats a drum from which pink and white lines radiate outward, creating a dynamic burst of explosive force. Dmitrieva's silkscreen technique achieves sharp, clean separations between colors, while her restricted palette - mint green, pink, white, and deep blue-black - maximizes visual impact through stark contrast. The lower portion reveals a stylized industrial cityscape with smoking chimneys, while diagonal pink streaks slash across the ground, suggesting toxic contamination of the landscape.

The poster's symbolic elements work together to create a powerful indictment of industrial pollution's impact on future generations. The gas-masked child represents an unsettling perversion of childhood innocence - where children should be free to play, they must instead protect themselves from toxic environments. The drum's transformation from toy to warning device mirrors this corruption of childhood. This juxtaposition of childhood imagery with industrial threat creates a stark moral challenge: how can a society claim to value its children while poisoning their environment?
Tatiana Ivanovna Dmitrieva (1947-2018) emerged as a key figure in late Soviet graphic design through her work with the Moscow Union of Artists and the "Plakat" publishing house. Her contributions to the 1980 Moscow Olympics earned international recognition, while her later focus on social and environmental themes reflected the changing politics of the glasnost era. Her works are held in major collections including the State Historical Museum and the State Museum of Russian Literature History named after V.I. Dal.

If You Swear Love to Children, Don't Poison Them with Smoke and Toxins!
Tatyana Ivanovna Dmitrieva, 1991
- Medium
- Silkscreen/paper
- Dimensions/
- 119 H x 72 W
- Country
- Russian SFSR
- Condition
- A | Excellent - Minimal to no signs of wear