Tonight I went to hear Dmitry Shostakovich's 7th Symphony performed
as part of the BBC Promenade Concerts, by what was essentially an
ad hoc orchestra conducted by the great Russian conductor, Vladimir
Gergiev (who immediately after his tumultuous reception at the Royal
Albert Hall, went to a Mayfair restaurant to eat blinis and caviar).

Shostakovich is now rightly popular. His deeply contradictory,
angst-ridden music, suffused with patriotic ardour, but also anguish
at the human price paid for socialism's successes, strikes a
chord with contemporary audiences. Perhaps because of
his current popularity, there is a perverse but well-funded fashion for
derogating Shostakovich's life commitments: thus it is argued that
even the glorious Seventh, written in Leningrad in 1942 at the height
of the Nazi seige of that city, which claimed more than two million lives,
was actually not a lyrical paean to the Soviet Motherland, but an anti-
Bolshevik musical diatribe. That is absurd, of course. Whatever
they may say, Dmitry Shostakovich lived and died a paid-up member
of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union.

Shostakovich's political commitment is rooted in the dynamic reality of
Soviet cultural life. This dynamism is evident in literature and painting
as well as in music.

Critics of Stalinist policy towards the arts have difficulty admitting what
is actually obvious: that despite the supposed philistinism,
bloodthirstiness, stupidity, evil-mindedness and malice of Stalin and his
'henchmen', the Soviet Thirties saw the greatest outpouring of works of art,
theatre, literature, film, music, sculpture and architecture in Russian
history. This takes some explaining: the tally of major 20th century works
in any field of culture (symphonic works, novels, paintings, films etc)
shows a high number of works created in the Soviet Union under High
Stalinism.

It is said that under the rubric of Socialist Realism Stalin inflicted a
cruel and stultefying regime on the fine arts, which engendered
easel-painting and sculpture of generally second-rate dullness and awful,
servile conformity. These defects are said to be matters of principle and
outweigh any conceivable theoretical gains which in any case are lacking in
the fine arts (compared to cinematography etc). It is usually added that it
is no excuse to point out that actually some of the stuff was rather good:
since we do not applaud the Borgias because their rule happened to coincide
with the flowering of Renaissance art, we should not indulge Stalin's
excesses either. In civilised (bourgeois) society artists and the consumers
of their work are each allowed to do their thing in serenity and personal
security. Stalin's 'Terror' did not permit this. The Party stood between
artist and viewer, subjecting both to its baleful gaze.

Stalin's policy towards the arts is therefore to be opposed on two general
grounds. First, no-one (least of all a jackbooted commissar personifying the
absolute state) has the right to mediate between the artist and his/her
viewer. Second, the sovereignty of the individual and the right to live free
from fear in a law-governed society, is more fundamental even than the right
of the state to survive. Stalinist repression and policing of the arts is
'barbaric' and 'unconscionable' [but one justification for Stalin's policy
towards Russian artists might lie in comparing it with Hitler's and then
trying to judge whether Stalin's policy helped or hindered the Soviet state
in its attempt to prevent Hitler carrying _his_ policy out].

It is not just a matter of the Stalinist liquidation of the avant-garde and
their substitution by the alleged aridities of socialist-realism. The real
issue is more serious and universal: freedom of expression versus the
interests and rights of the state. The Bolsheviks arrogated the right to
subordinate art to politics, meaning, to the creation of their dictatorship.
Still more heroically, Lenin even wanted not merely to use art for his own
purposes but to insist theoretically that art could not even be art unless
it served those purposes.

If you grant that art is a class question and must be subordinated to a
class politics, then you take your stand with Lenin's frankly 'totalitarian'
subordination of art to political life and the interests of the state. Art
has no more autonomy than any other sphere of life. The proletarian
dictatorship insists on its subjugation. It is clear too that Stalin was the
executor of Lenin's behests, and you cannot separate Lenin's policy from
Stalin's. If Lenin was wrong, so was Stalin. If both were wrong then we have
to admit that the socialist revolutionary project contains a radical defect
and cannot be the instrument of human freedom. So the question is important.

Ironically, both Lenin and Stalin turned out to be conservators of bourgeois
cultural forms. Lenin destroyed the Proletkult and called instead for the
preservation of the finest achievements of bourgois culture, and for making
them accessible to the masses. Stalin in his time purged the avant-garde,
accusing it of 'formalism' and even drove Mayakovsky to his grave. However
in terms of the principled question it would not have mattered if the Party
had done things the other way round, ie, purged the Socialist Realists and
the Victorian novelists and made the practitioners of Proletkult into
honoured representatives of official Soviet art. The issue would still be,
does the Party have the right to decide which art and which artists shall
survive and prosper, and which shall be silenced and purged?

As the anti-stalinist Aleksandr Sidorov of the USSR (now Russian) Academy of
Arts put it, under the Bolsheviks 'Man, and especially 'simple' Soviet man,
was thought of exclusively as a viewer, but by no means a consumer or
possible possessor, of decorative art works, and at best he had to be
content with a mere reproduction, copy or album of an artist's work. This
circumstance is indissolubly linked to the following four processes.
Firstly, public awareness was transformed into the object of demagogic
manipulations and speculations. Secondly, aesthetic requirements were
depersonalised, and the interests of the individual were completely
dissolved in ideological and artistic programmes imposed by the State.
Thirdly, leaders appeared who acted as mediators of culture and invariably
took up a position above the viewer, reader or listener and knew better than
others what to teach, how to educate, what the people must know and what
they must not know, what the people needed and what was contrary to their
needs, what was 'good' and what was 'bad'. And fourthly, art criticism was
reduced to a concrete exposition of ideas sent down from on high; it played
the role of a priest of a new belief who explained the postulates of that
belief to the parishioners of the church of socialist realism.' (Matthew
Cullerne Brown, 'Art Under Stalin', (1991) pp 12-13). [Sidorov is worth
debating even if it seems unfair to blame the Bolsheviks for flooding the
country with cheap editions of colour prints of the fina arts, which they
did.]

Related to this totalitarian Bolshevik intent is the Stalinist notion that
art, like society itself, can make progress, and that since socialism is 'a
higher stage', socialist art too must be higher, must be 'the most forward
looking and progressive of all the artistic methods that have ever existed.'
(ibid). All these assumptions, needless to say, have been falsified by
events. Or have they?

The decay of Soviet culture under Brezhnev, its progressive atrophy,
fissiparousness and lack of direction, and the growing cynicism of official
circles towards its products, the growing public indifference to
socialist-realist art and the hypocrisy of its practitioners and apologists,
and the growth of 'dissident' oppositional art, might seem all the evidence
we need that the goals of Stalinist High Art were absurd and self-defeating:
as Sidorov says (or seems to), only the market, with its purveyors and
possessors, can clean up the arts.

In Stalin's own time, such cynicism and hypocrisy was largely absent.
Officially-sanctioned art was also the art consumed privately by leading
officials, including Stalin himself, who was a great admirer of the works of
socialist-realists like Sergei Gerasimov, Oganes Zardaryan, Martinos Sarayan
and Aleksandr Laktionov. The belief in the unfailing superiority of
socialist methods, and in the certain victory of socialism and decline of
capitalism, was genuine and widely held. By the time of Brezhnev, such
'naivete' was openly mocked within the ruling circles, whose corruption was
almost boundless, as was their contempt for the stupidity, helplessness and
vulgarity of the masses. Thus official attacks on the avant-garde coincided
with growing immorality and debauchery in the ruling circles, such that
Brezhnev's own daughter held up banks at gunpoint - aided by her husband
(the chief of police!) in order to fund her jewelry acquisitions; and every
high official had his 'own' private collections of forbidden Western art,
literarture, and pornography. Sovietart was soon divided into sinned-aganst
and sinners; most execrated were the portrait-painters of Stalin himself;
they and their works (irony!) were purged from the historical record and
Stalin's once-ubiquitous image was effaced from public spaces.

Since 1991 there has been a reversal of attitudes. The bourgeois collector
has decided in his counting-house of a soul that works of Socialist Realism
are high-value items. Of course! What else could you expect, given the way
of the art world?

However, it was unexpected. The first Sotheby auctions, held in Moscow
during the era of Peretsroika, showed formerly forbidden avant garde (often
openly anti-soviet) works. The history of those works and of these auctions
was curious: they did not fetch the prices hoped for, and these first
attempts to stimulate and profit from, anti-soviet and post-soviet painting
in Russia, did not lead anywhere. But Socialist Realism, on the contrary,
has powered on from strength to strength. Socialist Realist paintings,
especially from the era of High Stalinism, proved highly collectible and now
fetch extravagant prices in auctions. That such political works should end
up as prized commodities seems odd. I am not aware that the same posterity
obtained for Nazi High Art, so it cannot be a question of the general
collectibility of alleged totalitarian art forms.

Of course, despite everything there is no reason why Socialist Realist works
should not prove to be art. After all it is no disqualification of any
artwork that it was produced to state order, or according to an ideological
plan of some kind. Western art began out of church and state patronage, or
out of fawning depictions of the persons, families and possessions of
powerful and wealthy men.

The issue for Sidorov and for us is still therefore not whether works
produced for supposedly bad reasons or under difficult circumstances can be
art but whether or not socialists who hold state power acquire a right to
decide the content of art and the style it is produced in.

In any case, Sidorov's prioritising of the relationship between the artwork
and the viewer, in a solipsistic and private discourse, also makes little
sense. In capitalism, artworks make the same uncertain journey of
realisation as do all other commodities and in the process become the
bearers of social relations. Under socialism, artworks may enjoy a different
modality, which subverts their existence qua commodities. But in either case
it remains true that any work submitted for public scrutiny enters the
social world and is subject to the conventions, controls and internalised
censoriousness which exist in all cultures, times and places and arguably
provide not a straitjacket but the *form* of a representation without which
it would be impossible for the artist to create anything meaningful. While
for art to be art the epiphanic relationship to the viewer must exist and be
real, it is useless to deny the social context.

The moment of repression/internalisation of normative categories is also the
moment of creation. This is literally so. Not for nothing was the Stalinist
1930s characterised BOTH by the fierce and relentless struggle against
formalism in music, literature and the arts that ended careers and even
lives, AND by a torrential outpouring of new work. The famous Pravda attack
on Shostakovich in 1934 put an end to musical adventures like Lady Macbeth
of Mtsensk, but also led to the towering achievements of Shostakovich's
middle years. The arts were to not merely prefigure socialism but also to
serve the goal of 'communist education'. In a society of total mobilisation,
art  too was mobilised.

Even when railing against the patronising, authoritarian state, Aleksandr
Sidorov (quoted above) is certainly aware that the issue is thus more
complicated than it seems (he ends his tirade with these words: 'I may have
thrown too negative a light on the range of art in the Stalinist period, and
perhaps I have paid too much attention to the 'extreme' manifestations of
that art. But, as the Russian saying has it, things are seen more clearly
when observed from one side.')

Socialist Realism was meant to take art beyond capitalist commodity
production. Just as the avant-garde of the Twenties strove to push beyond
the limits of the frame of the picture (its conceptual, formal, technical or
expressive frame; and even the 'frame' itself) so, too, did the
anti-formalist 'Realism' of the Thirties actually have the same avowed goal:
to push art beyond the boundary of its commoditised frame of perceptual
reference, of social signing or emblematage, and even of the picture's
physical frame which encapsulates it, marks it off from the world, and makes
of it a potential commodity. Realism inducted the viewer thru the frame and
beyond it into a world of concrete objectivity, of limitless possibility and
boundless growth.

Socialist realism is art precisely because it was the strict opposite of
'realist socialism', ie, the unvarnished depiction of actual (blemished,
faulty, dysfunctional, warped) Soviet reality, the socialism of the everyday
world of overwork, shortage, ennui, of private feuding and conspiracy.
Socialist realism was a confabulation of impossible opposites, an explosive
equilibrium founded on the concrete-objectivity of the form of
representation of allegedly normal, everyday events, scenes and contexts
which are actually unreal, hyperreal, or simply fabulous. That is why when
one contemplates them now, these paintings often have a mirage-like quality,
a hallucinatory, iconic, narrative substance which can arouse intense
feelings, which can wound the observer, and all this of course sharply
contradicts the technical realism of the specific representation. It is as
if all of them: Stalin, his politburo, the stern-faced captains of the
Workers and Peasants Red Army and the masses themselves: the miners,
railwaymen, aviators and constructors, the collective farmworkers, the
plump, well-found, ruddy-cheeked maidens in their banya - creamy-skinned,
full-bodied women holding infants, in images so violently real that the
intense scents of birch leaves and pine resin, the steam hissing from the
furnace, the sound of gaiety and laughter, almost overwhelm the viewer - or
labour-scenes, with tanned, lithe men working a lathe or scything a field,
or the shining-eyed masses at a factory-committee meeting, an avuncular bust
of Lenin beaming impishly on -- all are part of a landscape of pure dreams,
which we can behold with a kind of nostalgic languor, with feelings of
desire which seem to have neither a source within ourselves nor in the
object-field of the painting.

I am just now examining an image of a painting by Aleksandr Samokhvalov
entitled 'Woman Metro Builder with Penumatic Drill', (1937, from the Russian
State Museum collections). This shows a woman shock-worker briefly resting
from excavating the tunnel for the Moscow Metro. In reality it is a
Palladian scene; classical and statuesque, there is a stillness about her
face, which is strongly illuminated from the front, and as she gazes into
the bright light, we almost see the socialist Arcadia she is seeing, the
disclosed/hidden, future/past utopia. One half-clenched hand, plump and
dainty, unmarked by labour, rests upon a rock; she has tied her jacket round
her waist and the effect is of a classicial, robed piece of statuary that
seems to have emerged from the living rock; the face is youthful, plastic,
inquisitive, robustly beautiful and determined: there is defiance in her
eyes. Whatever this painting is of, it is not of a woman metro builder (but
there were tens of thousands of women volunteers, often office workers, who
did help dig the tunnels, even during lunch-breaks; it is them the painting
celebrates, not as they are but as they should be).

As the magazine Sovietskoe Isskustvo (Soviet Arts) said in 1935, Moscow was
to become 'a city of happiness,' which would inspire 'feelings of harmony
and well-being'. This was not so much socialist town-planning as a kind of
delirium. And only it was only a year before that Zhdanov officially
declared to the writers' congress, the policy of 'socialist-realism'.

There are not many art historians writing much about socialist realism. Two
are Brandon Taylor and Matthew Cullerne Brown, whose 1998 book 'Socialist
Realist Painting' is a resplendent, coffee-table edition and highly
recommended; it is glorious feast of 'art of Stalin's time [that is] full of
purpose - always ready, as it were, to die with its boots on' (Cullerne
Brown, Art Under Stalin, (1991) p277). Importantly, Cullerne Brown locates
the origins of Socialist Realism in the prerevolutionary history of Russian
iconography, and of the peredvizhniki, the 19th century Itinerants who
celebrated everyday life. He does not manage to answer Sidorov's questions,
but perhaps they are unanswerable anyway. Brandon Taylor's two-volume work
on Soviet art which Pluto published in I think 1992-93 have this market
pretty much to themselves.

If all art is socially conditioned (as well as conventionally constrained)
then at least Leninist-Stalinist policy has the merits of transparency,
openness and honest partisanship, expressed in the idea that artists, like
everyone else, shall be driven by what was known as partiinost', that is,
the over-riding commitment to the Party and its principles and endeavours.
These were about generalising to the masses the promise of bourgeois
civilisation, and increasing the education, health, welfare and life
opportunities of the common woman/man. The Party strove to make art a mass
and not just an elite activity and was proud of its achievement, announcing
in the late Thirties, in the style of High Stalinist statistics, that 80
percent of Soviet artists hailed from the working class and the peasantry.
According to the party, that made them part of the new ruling class's
(proletarian) intelligenstia. This is shaky Marxism, but anyway this is not
the real achievement of Soviet Socialist Realism: which is that actually it
DOES fulfil Sidorov's requirements: because at its best it is art that
communicates in an immediate, epiphanic, and thaumaturgic way.

But even this fact (subversive of 'bourgeois' critiques) is not the real
reason for acclaiming Socialist Realism. More radically, it is because
Socialist Realism really did point beyond the 'framing' of art within the
commoditised object world of reified social relationships. Far from being a
step backwards, of being the expression of the (non-existent) 'Stalinist
Thermidor', Socialist Realism was a step into a different world, a
de-technicised, de-fetishised world of representations that made it the true
successor/displacer of the avant-garde movements of the first quarter of
this century. Socialist Realism tried to portray a postcapitalist universe
of transparently human intersubjectivity based on what Gorky called 'the
true data of our socialist society'. In striving to do so, it actually
created a mythical back-projection of heroic grandeur onto the drab face of
Soviet reality. But so what? Compared to this the West could only show the
dementia of Jackson Pollocks' CIA-expressionism, or Warhol's pathetic
juvenilia, or the empty scatologies of postmodernism.


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