'I object to rain that is cheerless': Landscape art and the Stalinist aesthetic imagination

Authors
Citation
M. Bassin, 'I object to rain that is cheerless': Landscape art and the Stalinist aesthetic imagination, ECUMENE, 7(3), 2000, pp. 313-336
Citations number
47
Categorie Soggetti
EnvirnmentalStudies Geografy & Development
Journal title
ECUMENE
ISSN journal
09674608 → ACNP
Volume
7
Issue
3
Year of publication
2000
Pages
313 - 336
Database
ISI
SICI code
0967-4608(200007)7:3<313:'OTRTI>2.0.ZU;2-N
Abstract
This essay considers discourses around nature and landscape in the Soviet a rt criticism of the Stalin period. Rather than being a genre that was negle cted or in some way subordinated to the themes of industrial construction a nd socialist transformation, the depiction of nature was a major preoccupat ion of Socialist Realism. Indeed, it because progressively stronger as the Stalinist period developed from the 1930s to the early 1950s. There was a c ommon belief thar the most important Soviet political and social values cou ld be conveyed through the imagery of the natural landscape, and there was much discussion in the literature as to how the ideological messages could best be articulated. An examination of mis discourse reveals, however, that the semantic potentials of landscape art ran in very different directions. Thus while Stalinist art was eminently successful in 'politicizing' the re presentation of the natural world, it was manifestly unable to remove the a mbiguous and even contradictory nature of the messages that resulted.