Soviet Avantgarde
Soviet Avantgarde
Soviet Avantgarde
The loss that technology caused to the world would be compensated...by the single
total project of reorganizing the entire universe, in which God would be replaced by
the artist-analyst. The goal of this total operation was to halt all further development,
labor, and creation forever. Arising out of all this is a new "white humanity." (Groys,
16)
Quite in line with their ideas, avant garde artists were politically very active, much
involved in agit-prop projects. They can be said to have taken important part in the
'aesthetization of politics' as demonstrated by Güleç and Savaşır. Rodchenko's Design for a
Kiosk "Future - our Only Goal" (Güleç and Savaşır, 307) is an example to cite. Not only
posters, costumes, stage designs etc. which their nineteenth century predecessors already
realized, but they also designed radio stations, loudspeakers, educational huts, among other
facilities and objects that participated in and shaped daily lives of the envisioned society.
The Stalin era satisfied the fundamental avant-garde demand that art cease
representing life and begin transforming it by means of a total aesthetico-political
project. Thus if Stalin is viewed as the artist-tyrant who succeeded the philosopher-
tyrant typical of the age of the contemplative, mimetic thought, Stalinist poetics is the
immediate heir to constructivist poetics. (Groys, 36)
Boris Groys points to some differences, the first of which is the attitude towards
classical heritage. Avant-gardists were criticised about being "liquidationists". The Soviet
realism can be said to have saved the classical heritage from a possible destruction by radical
avant gardists. The second difference is that socialist realism chose to shape the reality by
means of utilising realistic language, rather than breaking completely apart from it. And the
third distinction is that socialist realism coincided and interacted with the new romantism and
a realization of the place of the individual as an agent.
Ideological concerns aside, filmmakers of this era concerned themselves with the
aesthetical question of how to deal with the advent of sound in movies. The silent
aesthetic had taken such root that imagining 'talking' pictures would irritate an
important number of directors. The notion behind this sentiment was that the advent
of sound could be detrimental to the clear distinction they had been endeavouring to
set between theatre and cinema. (Taylor, 195-6)
The transition to sound in Soviet cinema coincided with the increasing political
isolationism of Stalinist Russia and the revamping of film industry along the lines of
domestic film production, without using revenues from Western imports. In Circus,
Aleksandrov perpetuated Stalinist ideological codes by means of the backstage
musical's self-reflective conventions. (Prokhorov, 4)
St. Jorgen's Day (1930) is a comedy directed by Yakov Protazanov taking place
during the preparations for the St Jorgen's Day. It satirizes the ecclesiastical circles as greedy,
earthly people; making money off of people's ignorance. Meanwhile, Michael Korkis, a
criminal who has recently fleed from prison, decides to take this opportunity to acquire at
least some of the profit made by the clergy. On the day of the St. Jorgen, he dresses up as the
long-gone saint and appears before the people just at the moment when the priest calls for the
saint's apparition. One important motif that we encounter throughout the movie is the popular
obsession with "miracles" and how this is exploited by the clergy; i.e. how the clergy sells so-
called "miracles" in turn for money. In the movie they shoot about St. Jorgen's, for example,
the actor playing St. Jorgen is shown to walk on water, as a miracle. But then, quite
unexpectedly, tourists on canoes intrude the scene, and the camera exposes the sandy ground
just beneath the water on which St. Jorgen actually walks. These kinds of scenes deliver a
clear message under the palatable form of comedy, the message that the belief in "miracles"
is irrational and furthermore, that the people should be freed from the exploitation of clergy
and cling to the light of communism. Similarly to Circus, this movie, especially in the first
quarter, is self-reflective in that it takes the filming process as subject material, too.