Artists in the Soviet Union operated in a strange, wary time after the death of dictator Josef Stalin in 1953. Personal expression was forbidden and they were under nearly constant surveillance by KGB minders. Still, they made art and showed it to friends and followers in sometimes clandestine circumstances.
Despite their perilous relationship to official Soviet culture, the artists — including some of the era's most famous dissidents — produced striking work that retains its visual and psychological punch.
Some of that art has found a new home at the Museum of Russian Art (TMORA) in south Minneapolis. More than 50 paintings by 20 dissident or unofficial artists are featured in "Artistic Underground in the Late Soviet Era," a smart, well focused survey on view through Nov. 13.
Understanding just how radical the art was in its day requires a bit of context, especially for Americans to whom self-expression is generally assumed to be a key art goal regardless of subject or style. In the Soviet system by contrast, Western-style individualism was considered decadent, subversive, even dangerous enough to prompt censure, exile or both. Especially under Stalin, art was expected to serve the state, not tout the self.
Critiques of power
At the height of the Cold War in the mid 1950s, young Ilya Kabakov — now one of the country's most famous dissidents — diagramed what life was like for a Soviet citizen of the time. It was a dog's life. Specifically the dog in a famous 1902 experiment by Russian psychologist Ivan Pavlov, who conditioned the beast to salivate even when it didn't get food.
Kabakov's boxed-in, two-dimensional Soviet citizen has a dog's body and two heads, one canine and one human. Sprouting from a sharp rose-red suit, the human head imagines an ideal life (wife, house, car) while its feral counterpart waits for a shot of food from the machine that controls them both.
By contrast with Kabakov's mordant view of the citizen/state relationship, Anatoli Zverev comes across as a total free spirit in his expressionistic 1956 "Self Portrait in Texas Hat," in which his colorful, smeary face peers from under an oversized Stetson. Sometimes homeless but always generous with food, wine and vodka, Zverev made art with whatever came to hand — ketchup, cottage cheese — when he ran out of paint. Then he'd sell his pictures cheaply and throw a party.
"Zverev was highly praised by other artists," said TMORA curator Masha Zavialova, who grew up in St. Petersburg in the Soviet era. "Now we look at his work and say his talent was overrated, but at the time it wasn't only his talent but also his personality that had an impact on other artists."