The Soviet Liberator Le Liberator Face
Also known as: Russian Liberator · Le Liberator Face · The Eternal Liberator
The Soviet Liberator, also called Le Liberator Face, is a Russophobe caricature meme derived from a 1940s painting by German artist Herbert Smagon. The faces of Soviet soldiers depicted in the painting, with exaggerated Slavic features, were extracted and turned into exploitable images on 4chan starting around late 20142. The meme found a niche following on imageboard communities where users photoshopped the distinctive faces onto other images and public figures.
TL;DR
The Soviet Liberator, also called Le Liberator Face, is a Russophobe caricature meme derived from a 1940s painting by German artist Herbert Smagon.
Overview
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
The Liberator meme typically works in a few ways:
Face swap: Crop one of the grinning soldier faces from the Smagon painting and paste it over the face of a Russian public figure, celebrity, or any person in a photo for comedic or satirical effect.
Painting edit: Take the full Smagon painting and modify it by adding modern elements, text, or placing the soldiers into different scenarios.
Reaction image: Post a cropped Liberator face as a standalone reaction in imageboard threads, usually in discussions about Russia, Eastern Europe, or Slavic culture.
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
The meme existed on Russian imageboards before it appeared on 4chan, where it was already known as "the liberator".
The original painting documents a real historical event: the Soviet capture of Roessel (now Reszel, Poland) on January 28, 1945.
Herbert Smagon created multiple works depicting the Soviet occupation of East Prussia, several of which were shared together on Reddit's /r/PropagandaPosters.
The YouTube compilation by Avtomat is one of the few video-format collections of the meme's various edits.
Frequently Asked Questions
References (3)
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- 3Characters of the Metal Gear seriesencyclopedia