Soviet artSoviet art, meaning visual art produced in the former Soviet Union, can generally be divided into two categories:
Officially approved art was required to follow the doctrine of Socialist Realism, which subordinated art to the purposes of the state. In practice, it meant that artists had to produce works glorfiying the leaders and policies of the Soviet Union. Art effectively became a form of propaganda. During the Stalin era, official Soviet art became a vehicle for the cult of personality. One of the best known official Soviet artists was Aleksandr Gerasimov, who was effectively Stalin's court painter. During his career he produced a large number of heroic paintings glorifying Stalin and other members of the Politburo. Nikita Khrushchev later alleged that Kliment Voroshilov spent more time posing in Gerasimov's studio than he did attending to his duties in the People's Commissariat of Defense. Although Gerasimov's painting shows a mastery of classical representational techniques, the intellectual dishonesty of his treatment of his subjects diminished his status to little better than a political hack. Artists who could not work within the boundaries of Socialist Realism, and particularly those who wished to work in avant-garde or non-representational genres such as Expressionism, were excluded from the official Soviet art world. As a result, they were not able to gain admission to the Soviet Academy of Art. Like dissident writers who were denied membership in the Soviet Writers' Union, they were not regarded as employed when working on their art, and thus could be accused of social parasitism, a charge that could send a person to the labor camps. Many dissident artists took jobs that required relatively little effort and left them with time and energy to apply to their art. However, an artist who particularly attracted the negative attention of Soviet authorities could still be accused of social parasitism in spite of holding down a full-time job unrelated to art. Mikhail Gorbachev relaxed but did not entirely remove restrictions on artists who did not work in the genre of Socialist Realism. Only after the collapse of the Soviet Union were artists able to choose full-time art careers solely upon the marketability of their art rather than official approval.
Categories: Russia | Art history |
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