“The US Crisis” (1931) by Alexander Zhitomirsky is a sharp piece of political illustration, created for ROST magazine at the height of the Great Depression. It captures a moment of collapse and desperation as seen through a Soviet lens—an indictment of the economic system blamed for the crisis.
At the center is a man trapped in a vice. The word “КРИЗИС” (“crisis”) is stamped across its top ring. His legs are clamped, his arms thrown upward, his mouth stretched open in a scream. The caption cutting across the image reads: “ОТДАЙТЕ ДЕНЬГИ!” (“Give back the money!”). A pencil note in the upper left identifies him as a ruined American farmer. His expression and pose carry raw urgency: a single body pushed to the edge.
The vice is labeled “USA” and turned by a crank shaped like the American flag, it’s a crisi of the US’s own making. Zhitomirsky’s use of line is spare and forceful, shaped by constructivist principles. Every element—text, motion, proportion—locks into place. The result is both graphic and legible: an economy that consumes the very people it was meant to serve.
Alexander Zhitomirsky (1907–1993) trained at the Rostov Art School and at Vkhutemas under Vladimir Favorsky. Over five decades, he developed a visual language grounded in modernist design and political messaging. He was named a Merited Artist and later People’s Artist of the RSFSR, and his work appeared in journals, posters, books, and exhibitions across the USSR and beyond. In 1983, he published "The Art of Political Photomontage", documenting his approach. His work is now held in the Pushkin Museum, the Library of Congress, and major regional collections.