The 1980s were marked by Cold War tensions, culminating in a significant turning point with the Reykjavík summit of 1986. This meeting in Iceland between U.S. President Ronald Reagan and Soviet Premier Mikhail Gorbachev was more than just a diplomatic event. It symbolized a worldwide aspiration to dismantle the looming threat of nuclear war.
In the same year as the summit, Liliya Yakovlevna Levshunova created a propaganda poster titled "So that People don't Die from a Brutal War, Protect the World like the Apple of your Eye." This poster echoes the sentiments of the summit. Its dominant white, and black colors, along with the striking image of a mother protecting her child from war, encapsulate the urgency of the era. This visual metaphor resonates with the summit's goal to limit strategic nuclear weapons, reflecting the fragile balance between national pride and global responsibility.
The Reykjavík summit nearly resulted in an agreement to eliminate both sides' nuclear arsenals by 2000, but it was thwarted by disagreements over the U.S.'s Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI). Levshunova's poster serves as a stark reminder of the complexities of that era, capturing the collective striving for peace and mirroring Gorbachev's policies of perestroika ("restructuring") and glasnost ("openness").