A study of the Socialist Realist aesthetic focusing on the artist Aleksandr Deineka. Dislodging the avant-garde from its central position in the narrative of Soviet art,
Collective Body presents painter Aleksandr Deineka's haptic and corporeal version of Socialist Realist figuration as an alternate experimental aesthetic that, at its best, activates and organizes affective forces for collective ends. Christina Kiaer traces Deineka's path from his avant-garde origins as the inventor of the proletarian body in illustrations for mass magazines after the revolution through his success as a state-sponsored painter of monumental, lyrical canvases during the Terror and beyond. In so doing, she demonstrates that Socialist Realism is best understood not as a totalitarian
style but as a fiercely collective art
system that organized art outside the market and formed part of the legacy of the revolutionary modernisms of the 1920s.
Collective Body accounts for the way the art of the October Revolution continues to capture viewers' imaginations by evoking the elation of collectivity, making viewers not just comprehend but truly
feel socialism, and retaining the potential to inform our own art-into-life experiments within contemporary political art. Deineka figures in this study not as a singular master, in the spirit of a traditional monograph, but as a limit case of the system he inhabited and helped to create.
Author: Christina Kiaer
Binding Type: Hardcover
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Published: 03/19/2024
Pages: 360
Weight: 3.85lbs
Size: 11.02h x 8.74w x 1.18d
ISBN: 9780226827162
About the AuthorChristina Kiaer is the Arthur Andersen Teaching and Research Professor of art history at Northwestern University. She is the author of
Imagine No Possessions: The Socialist Objects of Russian Constructivism, coauthor with Robert Bird and Zachary Cahill of
Revolution Every Day: A Calendar, and coeditor with Eric Naiman of
Everyday Life in Early Soviet Russia: Taking the Revolution Inside.