Visual Propaganda in Soviet Russia: Case Study One
Visual Propaganda in Soviet Russia: Case Study One
Visual Propaganda in Soviet Russia: Case Study One
was not merely the seizure of power but the seizure of meaning.
Victoria E. Bonnell
I.
IS NEW ART GOOD FOR A NEW SOCIETY?
II.
TSARIST RUSSIA
A wide range of social ills accompanied the technological
advancements of the Industrial Revolution. Large segments
of the working class migrated to cities where factory jobs
were abundant, but in the absence of governmental regulations they were exploited and subjected to the squalor of
urban slums. The ninteenth century was plagued with massive strikes and street protests that threatened to unstabilize
the quickly modernizing nations. While monarchies slowly
acquiesed to more democratic forms of governmental rule,
however, the notion of socialism was still consider dangerously radical. Like Europes ruling dynasties, Nicholas IIs
Tsarist regime was domestically resented for its exploitation of
the working class. Along with the capitalists who controlled
the industrial complex, the Russian Orthodox Church was
implicated in this exploitation. The Church and the Tsarist regime indulged in extravagant lifestyles and flamboyant public
processions even as the working class grew more destitute,
and as the divide between rich and poor grew public unrest
intensified. Through the turn of the century workers demonstrations and strikes were viciously suppressed by government
forces which only served to agitate the masses further.
One result of this turmoil was an increase in the circulation of satirical magazines that published unflinching
critiques of the faltering regime. With a literacy rate hovering
around 30% in the rural regions and 50% within the cities, it
was the direct impact of the graphic illustrations featured in
these magazines that the embattled government feared most.
In fact, one of the more critical magazines was allowed to continue publishing thier written attacks as long as they agreed to
stop publishing illustrations. In response to the 1905 rebellion, the Tsars October manifesto severely curtailed freedom
of the press, censoring all critical magazines for several years,
but they inevitably reemerged with more ferocity than before.
The regime maintained power throughout a tumultuous decade of fomenting rebellion and the first World War,
but by the end of that war life in Russia had irrevocably
changed. The Bolsheviks claim that World War I had been
an imperialist-driven massacre that needlessly sacrificed the
lives of the working class found an audience, and their slogan
Peace, Land, Bread garnered wide support. In October
1917, the Bolsheviks succeeded in a long planned revolution
(the Bolshevik Party was formed in 1903). A vicious civil war
ensued that pitted the newly established Red Army against the
III.
SOVIET VISUAL PROPAGANDA
Long before the Bolsheviks seized power in Russia they had
developed a keen sense of what would be required to effectively lead their new society. They understood the need to create
a cohesive and stirring message to unify the masses behind
them. Many architects, actors, sculptors, artists and writers
were inspired to create art that served the proletariat. But two
artists in particular were integral in the development of the
propaganda that would extol the virtues of the new Russian
paradigm. Alexander Apsit (1880-1944), the most prominent
poster designer in the early Soviet years, was trained as an icon
painter. Although the son of a blacksmith, he travelled widely
as a youth in pursuit of his art. After traveling to Greece
and illustrating for an orthodox monastery, he returned to
his native St. Petersburg, then moved to Moscow where he
began working for the newly formed Bolshevik government.
Dimitrii (D.S.) Moor (1883-1946) was trained as a satirical
artist. Like many Russians, he was fascinated with religious
iconographic painting. Yet, as an atheist he was inspired in
a different manner than most. While others were transfixed
with religious fervor, Moor was drawn to the artwork itself; its
color, its powerful use of archetypal forms and figures, and its
composition. Moor was also influenced by Olaf Gulbransson,
a prolific political cartoonist who frequently contributed to
2
V.
SOVIET ICONS
January 1924. Almost immediately a cult of Lenin was established, with his embalmed body the centerpiece for this worship. Lenin was claimed to be more alive even after his death
than many of the living. His likeness was seen everywhere,
and posters that depicted him either alone or as a dominant
figure beside singular representatives of different tipazh, or
stereotypical figures, were replaced by posters that portrayed
him communicating to large masses of people. While Lenin,
the man, pased away, his political body which was refered to
as Lenins other body was considered immortal.
While the cult of Lenin matured only after his death, the
cult of Stalin was propagated by Stalin himself. In a letter defending Lenins leadership abilities, Stalin upheld the notion
of the absolute infallibility of the vozhd, which conveniently
absolved Stalin from any past or future misdeeds. Along
with implementation of photomontage, and the increasing
reliance on the extreme diagonal compositions favored by the
Constructivists, the imagery changed in focus from including
Stalin as a subservient element to Lenins visage to including
an implied blessing from Lenin to a much more prominent
Stalin. Stalin, portrayed as the heir apparent to Marx, Engels
and Lenin, the forefathers of communism, became more and
more central in the propaganda as the decade unfolded.
Gustav Klutsis was the best known poster artist during the
1930s, perfecting the Stalinist photomontage. Like others, he
sought to generate utopian imagery and believed photomontage was the best medium to symbolize the new revolutionary
structures and the technological and industrial advancements
of the day. Klutsis, although one of the few avant-garde
Russian artists willing to embrace the socialist realism style
demanded of Stalins propaganda machine, was arrested during a 1938 purge and executed in 1944.
VI.
CONCLUSION
repressive dictatorship that suppressed the voice of the common folk as an enemy of the common folk. By the time of
the forced collectivizations that took place during the 1930s,
Communism had been restructured to benefit those within
the privileged sector at the expense of those that constituted
the working class.
The origins of the revolution also contained a paradox in
that the Bolshevik leadershipa primarily educated and urban groupcondescended to the mostly rural populace they
aimed to inspire and lead. It is no surprise then, that the Bolshevik propaganda machine appropriated the visual lexicon
of the masses, which relied heavily on religious iconography,
eventually led to the official banishment of the church itself.
Biblical passages like He who shall not work, neither shall
eat were commonly use to exhort the masses to contribute
to the new Communist state, but in a fashion that eventually replaced one religion (Russian Orthodox) with the new
religion (Soviet Collectivism). The inspiring design work that
included the heroic working class in all its everyday splendor
eventually acquiesced to images of the infallible hero leader,
with idealized images of the working class (proletariat) playing
a coercive role in keeping the good worker in line.
It has been said that the effective imagery of the Bolshevik
posters played a key role in the success in the civil war against
the loyalists that followed the revolution. The posters for the
loyalists were neither as remarkable or as ubiquitous as those
of the Bolsheviks. From the outset of the new Soviet state
posters were everywherevibrant colors, dynamic illustrations and compositions added flair to the otherwise drab
settings. These posters served the social engineering goals of
the leadership more effectively than other single governmental
toolaside, of course, from the brutality that followed if the
messages these posters exhorted were ignored.
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