I’ve recently come across a little known, rather brief but quite extraordinary chapter in illustrated movie poster history, thanks to the poster department of Heritage Auctions. Just over one hundred years ago in Sweden, one distribution company or state agency seems to have commissioned an astonishing series of posters for imported American silent films that to today’s eyes seem both retro and modern at the same time (some of them could be mistaken for Mondo designs). They have been popping up for auction at Heritage over the past few years, reaching prices as high as $4,320 for Out West (above) and as low as $73 for the lovely Kingdom of Youth seen below. In fact there are a number coming up for auction next month and bidding begins next week.
The posters are all 2- or 3-color linocut designs and the Deco-influenced artwork would have been partially dictated by the printing technique, a variant of woodcut printing in which, as Heritage describes it, “a sheet of linoleum (sometimes mounted on a wooden block) is used for the relief surface. A design is cut into the linoleum surface and the sheet is inked with a roller called a brayer, and then impressed onto paper.” Heritage goes on to explain that “although linoleum as a floor covering dates to the 1860s, the linocut printing technique was used first by the artists of Die Brücke in Germany between 1905 and 1913 where it had been similarly used for wallpaper printing. They initially described these prints as woodcuts, which sounded more respectable.”
Linocut printing favored flat planes of color rather than texture and detail and so the artists who created these posters focused on compositions of shapes reminiscent of contemporary vector illustration. Curves, no doubt much easier to cut into lino than wood, dominate almost all the designs; note how the only straight lines in Out West are in the squares of Fatty Arbuckle’s shirt and the lines of his pistol. The one other major aspect of the designs is negative space: most of the posters make great use of empty backgrounds against which these bold compositions stand out beautifully. American movie posters of the era are, by contrast, painterly and realistic, filling the sheet with color and detail. Compare the US one sheet for the 1918 Dorothy Gish vehicle Battling Jane with its much more stylized Swedish counterpart.
Nearly all the posters seen here seem to have been produced between 1919 and 1921 by “A.-B. Svenska Biografteaterns Filmsbyrå, Stockholm” or the Swedish Cinema Theatre’s Film Agency. Quite a number of them, including the two above, are signed by Eric Rohman (1891–1949), who was one of the greatest and most prolific of Swedish poster artists, and a couple are signed by other designers, but most are unattributed. That said, the designs are remarkably cohesive, as if Svenska Biografteaterns Filmsbyrå had a clearly defined house style.
I’ve selected thirty (I couldn’t narrow it down to fewer) of the most striking of these ingenious designs, every one a beauty. If anyone knows more about their history please let me know in the comments below.
Many thanks to Heritage Auctions.