Free tools to create, edit and explore clipart - only on Clipart Library.
Collection of Imperialisms (17)
Looking for Imperialisms? Here you will find a carefully collected gallery of free images in high quality. Each Imperialisms can be downloaded for school projects, presentations, websites or creative designs. Need a custom image? Try our free image generator. These cliparts are free for personal use. Please read the full terms of use.
A bold, minimalist money bag icon featuring a prominent dollar sign-ideal for representing wealth, savings, or payments.
A bold visual contrast between symbolic patriotism and individual expression in high-contrast silhouette form.
A universally recognized “no tanks” sign, conveying opposition to militarization and armed conflict.
Four color-coded fish-shaped arrows represent major European colonial powers in Africa: France (blue), Belgium (green), Italy (red), and Great Britain (purple).
A cheerful goddess-like figure in green robes and a laurel wreath raises a lit torch, evoking themes of knowledge and inspiration.
A bold silhouette graphic showing one man emphatically speaking while the other listens-symbolizing assertiveness vs. receptivity in professional dialogue.
A satirical line drawing of a proud, mustachioed officer reviewing documents, embodying early 20th-century military bravado.
This satirical illustration uses symbolic elements-chains, flags, contracts, and blood-to condemn historical and ongoing colonial exploitation.
The Democratic Party’s donkey mascot, stylized as a wheeled silhouette topped with a patriotic Uncle Sam hat.
The King of Ejayboo sits centrally in traditional regalia, with the Governor of Lagos to his right, amid a formal outdoor assembly circa early 20th century.
This symbolic crest combines the U.S. national emblem with historical state and territorial coats of arms in a grand heraldic display.
A stylized graphic showing multiple nuclear bombs-most inert (yellow), two actively deployed (black with trails)-highlighting the tension between deterrence and disarmament.
A satirical 19th-century engraving showing two national personifications (likely Britain and Russia) partitioning the Earth, highlighting imperial ambitions in Asia and the Pacific.
