Eating chocolate. Copyright 1886. Prints and Photographs Division. LC-USZ62-92565. bibliographic record
Those with wares to sell or propaganda to purvey have long tapped the potential that first printmaking and then photography
provided for inexpensive and rapid dissemination of images. Although written language is seldom completely absent from broadsides,
posters, and other advertising media, the imagery used on such materials was designed to catch the eye and communicate in
a manner that often conveyed several messages at once. The juxtaposition of words and images, originally intended to pique
viewers' interest, can also point to new avenues for research.
The Prints and Photographs Division has substantial collections of images used to persuade, in a variety of formats:
Its unparalleled poster collections contain items used to advertise events, products, and ideas ranging from theatrical performances to recruitment for war work,
from household goods to women's liberation.
Graphic ephemera such as pictorial package labels suggest the ways in which an industrializing consumer culture associated women and women's
concerns with particular products.
Photographs used directly for display purposes or to incorporate into advertising copy, mostly acquired through copyright
deposit, are scattered throughout the collections, usually without the advertising copy that formed a part of the final product.