http://www.newseum.org/berlinwall/commissar_vanishes/

Photographs can lie. They certainly do in the Soviet Union from 1929 to 1953,
the years of Joseph Stalin's dictatorial rule. Stalin's agents routinely
arrest and kill as "enemies of the people" anyone who disagrees with his
politics. Communist Party workers then try to remove any trace of these
people from the photographic archives, and so from the media.


The Commissar Vanishes exhibition explores this censored history. By the
1930s Communist "truth" circulates worldwide in party approved books. With
airbrush or ink spot, the photo censors work quietly. But despite their
power, they ultimately fail. The images expose decades of photographic lies.
It's a stark visual tour through a society where freedom is not an option --
the culture of control that goes on to create the Berlin Wall.



http://www.newseum.org/berlinwall/commissar_vanishes/

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