Utopian Visions: Week 8 Outline:

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Socialist Realism – the art that replaced constructivism In the early years of the Soviet Union, Russian and Soviet artists embraced a wide variety of.
Advertisements

SOVIET PROPAGANDA A presentation by Dan Papperman.
Artistic Factions in the 1920s Lenin: conservative--traditional European culture is good and should be preserved Proletarians: ideological--Soviet art.
 Karl Marx wrote “Communist Manifesto” (1848)  Marxist = Communist  What is the root word of Communism?  Does that sound bad?  Goal was to make everyone.
The Russian Revolution  Czar Nicholas II  Wife Alexandra  Son Alexis- suffered from hemophilia  Daughters Tatiana, Olga, Maria, and Anastasia.
The Soviet Union Under Stalin – Part II
Agenda Film History: – Alternatives to Hollywood Storytelling – Soviet Cinema in the 1920s – Intro to Man with a Movie Camera 4:40: Man with a Movie Camera.
Soviet Cinema of the 1920s. The Basic Context Until 1917, emperors, known as Tsars, had always ruled Russia. However, because he had involved Russia in.
Soviet Ideology. Vocabulary Proletariat – the working class. Bourgeoisie – Wealthy owners of the ‘factors of production’. Factors of production – mines,
Chapter 16 World War Looms 1930’s in Europe. Democracy to Dictatorships Russia Bolshevik Revolution-Vladimir Lenin – Democracy fails, Communism state.
Totalitarianism Case Study: Stalinist Russia
The Russian Revolution pt II Lecture From Lenin to Stalin Lecture Notes.
Socialist Realism and Communist Propaganda
Evaluating a Photographers work It is very important to evaluate and analyse the work of your chosen photographer rigorously, not only to achieve good.
Russian Revolution: Civil War & The Soviet Union
VISUAL NOTES. 1. PRESENT DATES Present dates on a timeline with visual pictures (drawings) from the reading. Make sure spacing and the dates are even.
The Soviet Empire.
Art After Stalin’s Death Carter Ivey. Propaganda Propaganda was a major part of the arts in Russia, with the main function of portraying the country as.
Giotto The Lamentation (The Mourning of Christ), 1304 A.D.
SECTION 6 SOCIALIST REALISM AND THE CULT OF PERSONALITY YOU NEED TO KNOW: This links to work on The Terror and the topic of Social Issues (women, family.
RUSSIA A brief history of revolution. Karl Marx I am considered the father of modern socialism. Those who believed in my theories were said.
RUSSIA BETWEEN THE WARS: WHAT TYPE OF GOVERNMENT DID THEY HAVE IN RUSSIA? Up until 1917, Russia had a MONARCHY Their king was called a CZAR.
By Jeffrey Washington Elementary
What do you want control of??
The Soviet Union Under Stalin – Part II
“HISTORY AND CULTURE OF RUSSIA”
Jeopardy World War I Lenin Czars Stalin Q $100 Q $100 Q $100 Q $100
The Russian Revolution
Ohio Learning Standard #15
6. FROM AVANT-GARDE TO SOCIALIST REALISM
Utopian Visions: The Soviet Experience through the Arts
Birth of an Empire Russia began in the 9th century (800s A.D.)
Utopian Visions: The Soviet Experience through the Arts
Totalitarianism Case Study: Stalinist Russia
What is a revolution? In what ways can a revolution change a society?
6. FROM AVANT-GARDE TO SOCIALIST REALISM
Marx, Stalin, Lenin, and trotsky: Evolution of ideas
World war I – Lesson 3 Russian Revolution pgs
Russian Revolution.
The Russian Revolution
Outcome: Soviet Imperialism and the Fall of Communism
The Great Depression and the Rise of Dictators
Do Now Take out the worksheet on the Treaty of Versailles from yesterday Make sure you have this completed because we are going to quickly discuss it in.
Animal Farm & Russian Revolution: A Historical Backdrop
Journal Entry 3/6/17 Does the Mexican Constitution of 1917 (based on what you have read) create any real change in Mexico?
Art and Culture: Social Realism and the Cult of Personality
Stalin & the U.S.S.R. Lecture~ 3
Russian Revolution.
Lenin and Stalin World Studies January 6.
Animal Farm Historical Background
Animal Farm Historical Background
AF pre-read: basic WORDS
Orwell’s Animal Farm VS. The Russian Revolution
Pudovkin (a Russian film director) once said: “In every art there must be first a material, and secondly, a method of composing this material specifically.
The Aftermath of WWI Chapter 17 Section 1-2.
Guiding Question Analyze major changes and continuities in the economic and social experiences of Soviet Citizens in the USSR in the period following WWII.
Animal Farm By George Orwell.
Russian Art Movement.
Lenin – An assessment 90th anniversary of the death of Lenin.
The Bolshevik Revolution & Beyond
RUSSIAN REVOLUTION RUSSIAN REVOLUTION RUSSIAN REVOLUTION RUSSIAN REVOLUTION RUSSIAN REVOLUTION RUSSIAN REVOLUTION RUSSIAN REVOLUTION RUSSIAN.
Agenda Warm Up Quick Review for Conversation Candy
Animal Farm Historical Background
Welcome Back! Grab both a printer paper and a packet.
Question of the Day Think about the meaning of this quote.
Please take out your homework (Answers to the questions you created during yesterday’s Pause and Reflect Activity)
Welcome to the Museum of
Russian Constructivist Photography
Chapter 14-2 Totalitarianism: Stalinist Russia
World War II.
Presentation transcript:

Utopian Visions: Week 8 Outline: Socialist Realism: How did we get there? Socialist Realism: The Basics Socialist Realism in situ Exporting Socialist Realism

Socialist Realism: How did we get there? From here… Kazimir Malevich, Suprematist Composition – White on White, 1918

Socialist Realism: How did we get there? to here Boris Vladimirskii, Roses for Stalin, 1949

Socialist Realism: How did we get there? From here… Vladimir Tatlin, Monument to the Third International, 1919

Socialist Realism: How did we get there? to here Vera Mukhina, The Worker and the Kolkhoz Woman, 1937

Socialist Realism: How did we get there? From here… Konstantin Melnikov’s Rusakov Workers’ Club, 1928

Socialist Realism: How did we get there? to here Moscow State University

Socialist Realism: How did we get there? From here… http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Iey9YIbra2U (at 40:00) Dziga Vertov, The Man with a Movie Camera, 1929

Socialist Realism: How did we get there? to here http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1AHUQ1QRVn4 (at 1:08) Mikhail Chiaureli, The Fall of Berlin, 1949-1950

Socialist Realism: How did we get there? From here… http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_4M5bj65ijw (at 8:00) Dmitri Shostakovich, Symphony no. 2, October (1927)

Socialist Realism: How did we get there? to here http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gpui95CQ1a4 Red Army Choir

Socialist Realism: Rupture or continuity?

Socialist Realism: The Basics 1 1932: Stalin decree ‘On the Reconstruction of Literary and Art Organizations’  vast array of literary, art etc. associations dissolved; small number of all-Soviet unions (one for each sector of the arts) established (some earlier, some later)  organisation and financing of cultural production put on a new footing 1932: writer Maxim Gorky (1868-1936) returns to Soviet Union 1934 Writers’ Congress: writers and delegates discuss Soviet literature

Socialist Realism: The Basics 2 What was it? A doctrine? A style?away from abstraction, back to mimesis Tenets of ‘accessibility’ (dostupnost'), ‘the spirit of the people’ (narodnost‘), and ‘the spirit of the party’ (partiinost') ‘National in form, socialist in content’ – Stalin, 1934 ‘Comrade Stalin has called our writers engineers of human souls. What does this mean? What duties does the title confer upon you? In the first place, it means knowing life so as to be able to depict it truthfully in works of art, not to depict it in a dead, scholastic way, not simply as “objective reality,” but to depict reality in its revolutionary development’. – Andrei Zhdanov, 1934

Socialist Realism: The Basics 3 - Often defined by its Other, bourgeois formalism - Find middle-ground between poles of bad naturalism (=hyper-realist) and bad formalism (=abstraction) dialectics

Socialist Realism: Dialectics Naturalist ‘thesis’, Isaak Brodsky’s Stalin, 1937 Formalist ‘antithesis’, Pavel Filonov’s Stalin, 1936

Socialist Realism: Dialectics Socialist realist ‘synthesis’, Alexander Gerasimov’s Stalin, 1939

Socialist Realism: The Basics 4 Predecessors, e.g. in visual arts: Wanderers and Realists of AKhR (Association of Artists of the Revolution, founded in 1922) Socialist Realist Isaak Brodsky, painted by Wanderer Ilya Repin, 1913

Socialist Realism in situ 1949 Art Soviet discussion of N. N. Yerushev’s painting V. I. Lenin’s Funeral on Red Square: POKARZHEVSKY: Don’t you have eyes? Then there is Stalin’s face. You should have shown the face and the body in the center, but you have the balustrade and snow-covered fir tree branches at front center. That is your center. And no people to be seen. . . . Lenin can hardly be made out. After all, this is a picture, you should remember that Lenin is surrounded by people, friends, you should have made them stand out. Tone down the snow, you should have made a gray day and more light on the faces.--The picture is unsuccessful. Its main flaw is that there are no people and no faces. . . .

Socialist Realism in situ cont’d 1 PLASTOV: Comrade Yerushev, what happened on that woeful day? The leader died, next to him stands another leader, Stalin, stand comrades, comrades-in-arms, soldiers, stands the entire Russian people. . . . And how are you solving this question? You are solving it, it seems to me, without an understanding of the moment and the faces that you are depicting. How are you composing? In the foreground, you devote one-third of the composition to the most motionless [element] in the composition--the balustrade, the branches, the smoke, etc. The main, key elements--Stalin, Kalinin, Dzerzhinsky, and other comrades-in-arms of Lenin--cannot be seen. . . . It is confusing. Then you begin searching--who is standing there? That is probably Stalin--yes, it is him. . . . And altogether you get neither the people, nor the atmosphere in which this is taking place, nor the people behind these leaders, nor the leaders in front of the people. . . .

Socialist Realism in situ cont’d 2 Furthermore, regarding the psychology of those present: Stalin’s face should express the sorrow of a great man about a genius who has passed away, and how have you expressed this? You have not. All we see is a man with a lowered head, and so forth. On to Dzerzhinsky. It is impossible to see his face, how he looked. Even his felt boots are better drawn than his head. The people who are coming up, the simple people, how have you painted them? Very superficially, very dryly, without any details of what they felt, with what kinds of eyes they looked at the terrible grief that had struck the country. Whichever spot you look at, you find low-quality drawing, a lack of precision, or an inability to express the emotion that you undoubtedly felt in the most authentic and sincere way. I think it would help if you worked on this theme more thoroughly. . . . Do keep in mind that you have chosen an exceptional moment in the history of the country, in the history of mankind, and all of a sudden you approach this moment somewhat mechanically. I do not think this is right.

Socialist Realism as USSR’s most successful export product: GDR

Socialist Realism as USSR’s most successful export product: China

Socialist Realism as USSR’s most successful export product: North Korea

Socialist Realism as USSR’s most successful export product: Vietnam

Socialist Realism as USSR’s most successful export product: Mozambique

Socialist Realism: Interpretations 1 Not art, but propaganda (often: Stalin’s whim)  long-term consequence: Socialist Realism = ‘rare example in today’s cultural context--in a world where otherwise “anything goes”--of a truly irreducible other’. Boris Groys, ‘The Art of Totality’, in The Landscape of Stalinism: The Art and Ideology of Soviet Space, ed. Evgeny Dobrenko and Eric Naiman (Seattle, 2003), pp. 98–99.

Socialist Realism: Interpretations 2 'Kitsch, using for raw material the debased and academicized simulacra of genuine culture, welcomes and cultivates this insensibility. It is the source of its profits. Kitsch is mechanical and operates by formulas. Kitsch is vicarious experience and faked sensations. Kitsch changes according to style, but remains always the same. Kitsch is the epitome of all that is spurious in the life of our times. Kitsch pretends to demand nothing of its customers except their money -- not even their time.' From: Clement Greenberg, “Avant-Garde and Kitsch,” Partisan Review 5, no. 5 (1939), pp. 34–49. Nicholas Timasheff, The Great Retreat: The Growth and Decline of Communism in Russia (New York, 1946) Argument also dear to leftists

Socialist Realism: Interpretations 3.1 Part of much wider stylistic-sociopolitical trend, encompassing Fascist Italy, Nazi Germany, Communist China  Igor Golomstock, Totalitarian Art in the Soviet Union, the Third Reich, Fascist Italy, and the People's Republic of China (New York, 1990)

Socialist Realism: Interpretations 3.2 …including FDR’s USA 1942 mural, 'Security of the Family’, in main entrance of the Social Security Building in Washington, D.C. Part of Federal Art Project (FAP) and Works Progress Administration (WPA) programs.

Socialist Realism But what if the avant-garde and Socialist Realism have more in common than we like to think? Groys and the continuity thesis…