Usage Conditions May Apply Usage Conditions Apply There are restrictions for re-using this media. For more information, visit the Smithsonian's Terms of Use page. IIIF provides researchers rich metadata and image viewing options for comparison of works across cultural heritage collections. More - https://iiif.si.edu View Manifest View in Mirador Viewer Usage Conditions May Apply Usage Conditions Apply There are restrictions for re-using this media. For more information, visit the Smithsonian's Terms of Use page. IIIF provides researchers rich metadata and image viewing options for comparison of works across cultural heritage collections. More - https://iiif.si.edu View Manifest View in Mirador Viewer Usage Conditions May Apply Usage Conditions Apply There are restrictions for re-using this media. For more information, visit the Smithsonian's Terms of Use page. IIIF provides researchers rich metadata and image viewing options for comparison of works across cultural heritage collections. More - https://iiif.si.edu View Manifest View in Mirador Viewer

Fly Now: The National Air and Space Museum Poster Collection

Throughout their history, posters have been a significant means of mass communication, often with striking visual effect. Wendy Wick Reaves, the Smithsonian Portrait Gallery Curator of Prints and Drawings, comments that "sometimes a pictorial poster is a decorative masterpiece-something I can't walk by without a jolt of aesthetic pleasure. Another might strike me as extremely clever advertising … But collectively, these 'pictures of persuasion,' as we might call them, offer a wealth of art, history, design, and popular culture for us to understand. The poster is a familiar part of our world, and we intuitively understand its role as propaganda, promotion, announcement, or advertisement."

Reaves' observations are especially relevant for the impressive array of aviation posters in the National Air and Space Museum's 1300+ artifact collection. Quite possibly the largest publicly-held collection of its kind in the United States, the National Air and Space Museum's posters focus primarily on advertising for aviation-related products and activities. Among other areas, the collection includes 19th-century ballooning exhibition posters, early 20th-century airplane exhibition and meet posters, and twentieth-century airline advertisements.

The posters in the collection represent printing technologies that include original lithography, silkscreen, photolithography, and computer-generated imagery. The collection is significant both for its aesthetic value and because it is a unique representation of the cultural, commercial and military history of aviation. The collection represents an intense interest in flight, both public and private, during a significant period of its technological and social development.

Display Status

This object is not on display at the National Air and Space Museum. It is either on loan or in storage.

Object Details
Date 1986 Country of Origin United States of America Type ART-Posters, Original Art Quality Medium Poster, Commemorative Manufacturer Teledyne Continental Motors (Mobile, Alabama)
Physical Description Voyager . . .going the distance. Color, offset photolithograph print promoting Teledyne Motors depicts the Voyager in flight over a dark ocean with a light reflection. A blue, white and red border surrounds the image. In the blue border at bottom right, an image of a motor. Full text: within the image at top left, "Voyager" in white script; at bottom right, ". . .going the distance" in white serif font. Within the blue border at bottom, a white logo next to "TELEDYNE CONTINENTAL MOTORS "Pioneers in Aviation"" in a white font. Below the image of the motor, "TELEDYNE INDUSTRIES, INC. 1987" in small black font. Dimensions 2-D - Unframed (H x W): 61 x 45.7cm (24 x 18 in.)
Inventory Number A19900781000 Credit Line COPYRIGHT TELEDYNE INDUSTRIES INC., 1987 Data Source National Air and Space Museum Restrictions & Rights Usage conditions apply
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