
In recent years, the experienced poster master F. Zubakhin has been actively working. In political posters, he developed ideas of worldview, moral, and patriotic education of the masses — “May Day — Day of Solidarity of Workers” (1972); “50 Years of the Kyrgyz SSR” (1974); “On Guard for Peace” (1974); “The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics is the state of workers and peasants” (1976); “Leninism — the banner of millions” (1977); “I Serve the Soviet Union” (1977); “Glory to the Leninist Komsomol” (1978); “Get Out of Vietnam!” (1979); “The Party is the mind, honor, and conscience of our era” (1981); “Glory to the Soviet Army” (1982); “All-Union Communist Saturday” (1982) and others. Many of Zubakhin's agitation and exhibition posters call for labor valor, addressing current economic and everyday issues (“Five-Year Plan — Ahead of Schedule!”, 1971; “I Will Grow Everyone”, 1974; “To the Jubilee Five-Year Plan — Our Shock Labor”, 1974; “Labor Passport”, 1978; “Our Course — Efficiency and Quality”, 1977; “Glory to Labor!”, 1979; “To the Village — Scientific and Technical Progress”, 1980; “Driver! Caution, Children!”, 1982, and others). His posters are characterized by clarity of thought and a wide thematic range.
For Zubakhin, as a participant in the Great Patriotic War, the military-patriotic theme holds special significance, which is dedicated to a number of his best posters: “The idea of defending peace concerns the front-line artist as the most pressing international problem today. Among the most expressive posters of recent years is “Glory to Mosolov L. Versatility of Talent (at the exhibition of A. Turumbekov). — Soviet Kyrgyzstan, April 25, 1969. To the Soviet Army!”. Built on tonal transitions of red, it attracts with the precise graphics of silhouettes, expressiveness of dynamic forms, and the unity of image and text.”