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Art Under Stalin

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In 1932 Josef Stalin abolished all independent artistic organizations in the USSR. From then on the new guiding principle of partiinost, the requirement of absolute allegiance to the Party, gave rise to a unique period in the history of art.
Matthew Cullerne Bown's fascinating and often provocative analysis focuses on the art of the Stalin era, from 1932 to 1953, and includes discussion of the pre- and post-Stalin years. The author illuminates the political and social framework of the time and provides a complete expose of Stalinist aesthetics, socialist realism in art and neo-classicism in architecture, the Cult of Personality, art-world debates, and isolationism.
The violent imposition of Stalinist culture left Soviet society scarred, and subsequent progressive liberalization in the USSR is now reaching a critical stage. This book is a timely survey of a subject never before treated in depth, and it offers an invaluable background to understanding the art, culture, and society in the Soviet Union today. It also presents a fresh assessment, free from modernist and Cold War dogma, of the aesthetic value of the art of this period.
Art under Stalin has a still wider relevance. It is a sympathetic and penetrating study of the predicament of the artist in a totalitarian system, and raises disturbing questions about how an artist can survive under oppressive restrictions and continue to believe in his or her art.

Hardcover

First published September 5, 1991

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Nina.
Author 3 books8 followers
May 6, 2024
Indispensable book to understand what it meant to be an artist under Stalin's regime. Portions of the book express the author's own tastes, but nonetheless Bown was able to create a big, and yet, detailed picture of this turbulent, dangerous, and ambivalent time.
Profile Image for Takeo Choe.
22 reviews2 followers
May 12, 2023
it was really mid. Cant bother to write a full review for this, read it for a school project for a certificate. I don't feel like it was worth buying
Profile Image for John.
69 reviews17 followers
November 7, 2016
Occasionally interesting historic information if you bypass the projective commentary of the overwhelming narrator.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews