Aleksandr Deineka (1899-1969) : an avant-garde for the proletariat


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[cat. 98]. (In the latter, there is an illustration that 

might as well have been an inverted cinemato-

graphic version of Malevich’s 

Black Square

, but is 

in fact a trivial scene of an audience sitting before a 

white screen in a dark cinema waiting for the elec-

trician to restore electricity.

56

)



Electricity also finds its way into fragments 

of Deineka’s paintings. In 

Female Textile Workers

 

[cat. 125], a light bulb hangs over the figure on 



the far right. In a sketch of the left panel of a wall-

painting Deineka was commissioned for the 1937 

exhibition, electrical wiring dominates a picture 

of factory buildings, tractors and crowds dressed 

in red and white [fig. 24]. Using pale and somber 

colors in the second panel, Deineka portrayed the 

civil war, the impoverished soil of the 

kulaks


 and 

an old plow hauled by a starving draft animal [fig. 



25]. And it is clearly explicit in the colossal paint-

ing that closes this exhibition, 

The Opening of the 

Kolkhoz Electric Station

 [cat. 244], completed in 

1952.


However, Deineka’s oil paintings and posters 

from the late 1920s and 1930s explicitly reproduce 

electricity’s most dramatic eff ect: industrialization. 

Industrialization was more than just a guideline in 

Stalin’s policy; in addition to being linked with his 

nickname (“Stalin,” from “stal’,” meaning “steel” in 

Russian), industrialization was 

the 


policy during his 

rule: the transfiguration of Stalin himself, as Klucis’s 

photomontage for the magazine

 Za proletarskoe 

iskusstvo

 [cat. 143, 144] suggests. This identifica-

tion with industry was most visible in the imple-

mentation of the Five-Year Plans and the erection 

of the most emblematic structure of his time: the 

Moscow Metro, a project in which Deineka took 

part.

57

 



Deineka’s work illustrates the various sides of 

industrialization: the exploitation of natural re-

sources, industrial work and the mechanization 

of work in all its variants. In his paintings, he de-

picts themes frequently linked to the Five-Year 

Plans; during the First Five-Year Plan (1928–32) he 

produced some of his better-known paintings and 

posters devoted to industrialization [cat. 115, 116, 

125] and the collectivization and modernization of 

agriculture [cat. 168, 223]. 

Aviation was also a common theme in Deineka’s 

oeuvre. In the visual culture of the period, aviation—



FIG. 22. Double-page spread 

in 


URSS in Construction

no. 9, September 1931

Fundación José María 

Castañé


FIG.23. Double-page 

spread in 

SSSR na stroike

no. 7–8, 1934

Fundación José María 

Castañé [cat. 201]



FIG.26. Krushchev with an 

airplane model in his study, 

ca. 1960. Fundación José 

María Castañé

Fundación Juan March


the conquest of air and space—was closely linked 

to electrification and understood as a result of the 

conquest of earth and water and the spread of So-

viet ideology. Aviation was, for many years, a recur-

rent subject [fig. 26] in both Stalinist visual culture 

[cat. 210, 211] and Deineka’s body of work. The artist 

himself explained the impact aerial perspective and 

the experience of flying had on his output: 

I have traveled widely across Russia, Europe, Amer-

ica, by boat and plane, and I have been enriched by 

the impressions of these trips. But the most vivid im-

pression of all was flying over Kursk in 1920. I didn’t 

recognize the city from the air, so unexpected was 

the panorama of houses, streets and gardens unfold-

ing below me. It was a new feeling, that of a man ris-

ing in the air and seeing his hometown in an abso-

lutely new light, but it would take me a long time to 

realize that all of this could be useful to my art. . . 

58

He then continues:



We have seen the far side of the moon for the first 

time. Our cosmonauts have feasted their eyes upon 

the Earth from the cosmos and found it to be beauti-

ful. That which was a dream has become reality. The 

brilliant artist Leonardo da Vinci could only dream 

about flight, but we dream and fly.

59

 

Diff erent aircrafts—airplanes, hydroplanes or 



airships [cat. 205]—are represented in his canvases 

[cat. 207, 208], posters and illustrations for books 

and magazines [cat. 96]. These 

topoi 


are not an in-

nocent “mimesis” of reality: obvious and illustrious

forerunners are avant-garde artists Tatlin and Ma-

levich. In addition to the plane crash in the last 

scene of 

Pobeda nad solntsem

the opera reveals 

an antecedent to the faint, light 

pathos 

of the new 



Stalinist world [fig. 27]:

. . . it is precisely this “lightness” that characterizes 

the New World, and Malevich, whose postulate of ab-

stract nature fits in a world that has freed itself from 

the principle of the force of gravity.

60

 



Malevich also refers to this subject in his writ-

ings, as witnessed by the last phrase in the follow-

ing quotation, which belongs to “On the Museum”:

Flying’s magical appeal not only characterized the 

basic idea of suprematism concerning the “neutral-

ization of the force of gravity,” but also aff ected, on 

a broader scale, the liberating gesture of the era, the 

desire to escape three-dimensionality, an earthly 

prison, and contemplate a new global world from a 

bird-eye’s view. In this sense, flying was at that time 

just as innovative as cinema . . . since both enabled, or 

even forced, an entirely new dynamization of percep-

tive perspective. “Do we need Rubens or the Cheops 

Pyramid? Is a depraved Venus necessary to the pilot 

in the heights of our new comprehension?”

61

  



The 

Pathos of an Era

That said, the balance between formal qualities (that 

is, “realist”) and “content” (that is, “socialist”) can re-

veal diff erences between Deineka’s oeuvre and that of 

Isaak Brodskii or Aleksandr Gerasimov, for example,

FIG. 24. Aleksandr Deineka 

1937, 1937

Oil on canvas, 70 x 220 cm 

Perm State Museum



FIG. 25. Aleksandr Deineka

1917, 1937

Oil on canvas, 71 x 222.5 cm

Perm State Museum



FIG. 27. Illustrated page in the 

book 


Rabochaia Krestianskaia 

Krasnaia Armiia [Workers and 

Peasants Red Army], 1934

Fundación José María 

Castañé [cat. 215]

Fundación Juan March



44

It was a collective 

pathos 

of enthusiasm for all 



that was new and newly built, enhanced by urban 

planning, the bustle of work and production [cat. 

175]. This sentiment was further underlined by re-

current imperatives, exclamation marks and nu-

merous terms belonging to socialism’s semantic 

field that made their way into book and magazine 

titles or posters dominating the streetscape: 

The 


Reconstruction of Architecture, The Construction 

of Moscow, Build the Partnership of Craftsmen, We 

are Mechanizing the Donbass!

We Must Become 



Experts

The Metro is Here!



,

 

phrases that were in-



dicative of a happy collective consciousness work-

ing in unison towards a prosperous future.  

Within this collective consciousness was an en-

thusiastic eagerness intrinsically linked to produc-

tivity: poetry appeared beside the grueling job of 

mining [cat. 159, 160] while the Stakhanovites were 

seen marching cheerfully in 1937 [fig. 29]. Through 

this type of imagery the prototypical “landscapes” 

and “scenes” of socialist realism were rendered vis-

ible [fig. 30].

65

 What was conveyed was a fraternal 



feeling, a sense of joyful camaraderie that tran-

scended all borders and races [fig. 31]. A springlike 

pathos, 

a celebration of May Day [cat. 161], a spirit 

of which the citizens of the Soviet Union felt part 

and one to which Deineka contributed through his 

art. As he observed:

Life is especially good in the spring, especially du-

ring May Day—the world workers’ holiday . . . On Red 

to mention two well-known representatives of social-

ist realism.

 

Deineka mastered a wide range of themes 



and genres, and did not merely reproduce the proto-

typical iconography of socialist realism’s “aesthetic 

arsenal.”

62

 His art possesses an ambivalent quality: 



Deineka worked simultaneously on political posters 

and canvases and combined oil painting with the 

realist equivalent to Tarabukin’s “Machine Art” (the 

wall painting),

63

 as appreciated in his large-scale fres-



coes, mosaic panels and murals commissioned by 

the Soviet regime.

Overall, he was a gifted painter and an excep-

tional draftsman, and all these qualities combined 

made him stand out among his fellow painters. One 

could argue Deineka was the only painter who truly 

practiced “socialist realism”—and at the same time 

partook in the unique, genuine 

pathos

 of socialist 



realism and Stalinism—whereas other artists prac-

ticed a motionless form of “realistic socialism.”

64

Deineka’s body of work, for example, includes 



very few representations and portraits of the iconic 

figures of socialist realism (Marx, Lenin, Stalin or 

his entourage of Soviet leaders). Whether dead or 

alive, Lenin was, of course, at the core of Soviet life 

and its collective imaginary. Not even Stalin dared 

to question Lenin’s status as the indisputable lead-

er, and instead he chose to represent himself as a 

sort of duplicate, a new edition of the dead leader. 

(For a brief period, his body rested beside Lenin’s 

and his name was inscribed on the mausoleum 

beneath Lenin’s name.) Lenin was the exception in 

FIG. 28. Aleksandr Deineka 

Lenin on a Walk with 

Children, 1938

Oil on canvas, 136 x 190 cm 

Museum of Armed Forces, 

Moscow 


Deineka’s oeuvre, the only political figure he ever 

represented. In a radiant scene dating from 1938, 

Lenin is portrayed in an automobile surrounded by 

children—the future, the potential citizens of uto-

pia—as they leave a dark, cloudy past behind and 

move towards a brighter future, like the weather 

conditions represented in the image [fig. 28].

But if Deineka’s oeuvre is considered “social-

ist realism” it is not only because of the motifs of 

his work, but because he actively took part in the 

unique 

pathos 


of Stalin’s Russia and conveyed it in 

his work. During the 1920s and 1930s, the USSR 

seemed to experience a period of optimistic, 

cheerful romanticism.  For example, when con-

fronted with discouraging news—such as the sad 

unemployed women depicted in a painting from 

1932 [cat. 182]—the blame was placed on foreign 

actors (the title of this work was 

Bezrabotnye v 

Berline


 [The Unemployed in Berlin]).

Fundación Juan March



FIG. 29. Aleksandr Deineka 

                 

Stakhanovites, 1937

Oil on canvas, 126 x 200 cm

Perm State Art Gallery

FIG. 31. 

Double-page spreads in 

L’URSS en construction

no. 1, January 1937

Collection MJM, Madrid 

[cat. 231]



FIG. 30. Double-page spreads 

in 


URSS en construction

no. 8, August 1936

Collection MJM, Madrid 

[cat. 179] and 

URSS en construcción

no. 5–6, 1938

Collection MJM, Madrid 

[cat. 235]

Fundación Juan March


46

Square, we heard the powerful rumble of defense te-

chnology. We saw the measured tread of our soldiers. 

Sportsmen passed by with light steps. The merry 

hubbub of the Pioneers rang above the square. We 

saw an endless stream of people, walking by the Mau-

soleum in which lies the great Lenin . . . For us artists, 

the May holiday is doubly excellent . . . The profound 

humanity of the everlasting ideas of Lenin, his con-

cern about monumental propaganda imparts to art 

a special democratic nature, it is realized in the gran-

deur of images, comprehensible to ordinary people 

far beyond the limits of the Soviet Union. Paintings, 

frescoes, the adornment of the cities and everyday 

life—all should be pierced through with a profound 

national spirit and with beauty.

66

A spirit of sentimental lyricism imbued every-



thing. In 1934,  an excessive number of floral mo-

tifs appeared on the front cover of 

SSSR na stroike 

[cat. 214], while the inside pages featured a chil-

dren’s off ering at a floral eff igy of Stalin [fig. 32]. 

It was a spirit of bucolic lyricism, as appreciated 

in the issue devoted to Gorky Park which included 

an embarrassing inscription by George Bernard 

Shaw.

67

 In short, Soviet citizens felt they were liv-



ing in a paradise and, more importantly, a paradise 

eff ectively safeguarded [fig. 33] from its enemies. 



“The Reality of Our Program is Real People, 

It’s You and Me”

In this proletarian 

chanson de geste

, revolutionary 

work ethic became attached to productivist and bio-

logical utopias, something of a Soviet take on Tay-

lorism, Fordism and Eugenics that was evidenced in 

the ideas put forward by Aleksei Gastev [fig. 34] and 

the Central Institute of Labor, Aaron Zal’kind’s 

Psy-


chology of the Communist of the Future

, Aleksandr 

Bogdanov’s optimistic theories about vitality, and 

Valerian Murav’ev’s pamphlets on the use of time as 

a means of organizing labor.

68

 The regime’s obses-



sion with progress, comparative figures and visual 

graphics—as appreciated, for example, in a unique 

edition in Spanish of 

Moscow Has a Plan 

by M. Il’in 

[cat. 174] with a front cover designed by Mauricio 

Amster—went hand in hand with their centralized 

and demiurgic conception of political power. And 

while such high ideas were instrumental, in the end 

work methods and manpower are inseparably linked. 

In the following text, Deineka expressed a sentiment 

that characterized his entire body of work, a motto 

that may well be applied to Stalinist iconography: “At 

one time I was carried away by the lacework of facto-

ry constructions, 

but they are only the background. I 

always portrayed man in close-up

 . . .”


69

In spite of the mammoth size of the factories 

and their beastly machinery—as seen in the aeri-

al photograph of the Magnitogorsk complex [fig. 



35] which was compared to the Ford River Rouge 

plant


70

—manpower and the physical eff ort of hu-

man beings continued to be the center of atten-

tion: Like Razulevich’s photomontage [cat. 170] or 

Klucis’s poster of Stalin marking the pace of work-

ers and the militia [fig. 36], the leader’s statement 

that “the reality of our program is real people, it’s 

you and me” defined the era. An era epitomized by 

the slogan “Nothing is impossible for a Bolshevik” 

[cat. 216]. The emphatic words printed in Nikolai 

Sidel’nikov’s photo collage [cat. 190]—“time, en-

ergy, will,” all Soviet, it is understood—could over-

come anything. The sun’s death left a void in which 

time ceased to exist allowing the Bolsheviks to not 

only shorten distance

71

 but destroy it, and lead the 



way towards “the world behind the looking glass 

(‘all the tops facing downwards as if in a mirror’) 

where time either stops or goes randomly ‘against 

the clock’.”

72

 In this mindset, the Five-Year Plan 



could be achieved in four, as Vasilii El’kin’s poster 

suggests [cat. 178].

Fredric Jameson has pointed out that the pro-

cessual logic of the Soviet system must be under-

stood within this context. The subject matter of 

sport [cat. 192, 193] and fit, athletic bodies [cat. 

195]—recurrent in Deineka’s work—also responds 

to this concept, as observed by Boris Groys.

73

 The 


productivity of the body was directly conveyed 

by Deineka in works like 

Shockworker, Be a Physi-

cal Culturist!

 [cat. 113] and 

Collective Farmer, Be 

a Physical Culturist!

 [cat. 191], both from 1930, or 

the outstanding 

Work, Build and Don’t Whine!

 from 

1933 [cat. 197], in which he articulated the produc-



tive, military and patriotic qualities of sport, under-

stood as a matter of state, with striking and opti-

mistic detail.

The Great Celebration of the 

Citizens of the Future

The general 

pathos 

of the Stalin era can be summa-



rized (as Boris Groys and Christina Kiaer have done, 

among many others), in a phrase coined by Stalin 

in 1935: “Life has become better, comrades, life has 

become more joyous.” This remark applies to the dif-

ferent aspects of the Soviet life that socialist realism 

tried to represent in its “revolutionarily transforma-

tion” and also mirrors the festive atmosphere of the 

time. Deineka was part of and contributed to this cel-

ebratory spirit, present in some of his better-known 

compositions.

However, this general feeling, this atmosphere 

can only be understood as the almost psychotropic 

eff ect of a kind of ideological hard drug: the belief 

that they were already living in the future: the fu-

ture they had dreamed of, their goal [see fig. 3], a 

future they already lived in because their “dreams 

had come true” [fig. 37].

This sentiment runs through the entire rep-

ertoire of choreographed motifs which, due to 

FIG. 32. Illustrated page in 

URSS en construction

no. 3, March 1934

Collection MJM, Madrid 

[cat. 72]

FIG. 33. 

Double-page spreads in 

L’URSS en construction

no. 1, January 1937

Collection MJM, Madrid 

[cat. 231]

Fundación Juan March


restrictions of space, was examined in this essay 

through the structural metaphor of light and its 

artificial transformation. This repertoire signals to 

what extent socialist realism was a vehicle for the 

transmission of Soviet ideology in everyday life 

[cat. 35]. As Ekaterina Degot suggests, socialist 

realism followed the inexorable demands of an ar-

tistic economy targeted at consumers of ideology 

rather than market consumers.

74

 From the Kremlin 



star [cat. 75], the buildings [cat. 158], the auto-

mobiles’ brake lights [cat. 77], the New Year tree 

lights [cat. 76], or an image of one of the Seven 

Sisters on the back of a pack of cigarettes [cat. 71]; 

from work to death, as well as children’s play [cat. 

156], a “varied uniformity” seems to coherently run 

through everyday life: Stalinist culture could well 

be defined in theatrical and cinematographic (as 

well as museistic

75

) terms. In short, it was rendered 



through representation. 

Soviet life was, to a certain degree, “per-

formed,” not only in a literary sense as entertain-

ment for the masses—like the marching soldiers 

who spell out the leader’s name (Kirov) with their 

colored uniforms [fig. 38]—but as a genuine, social 

choreography in which each person occupied his 

designated place within a larger machinery. The 

eff igy of its motor and main actor, Stalin, can be 

interpreted—as in this photomontage—as a meta-

phor for this social structure [fig. 39]. 

Socialist Realism as the Mimesis of a Dream

The images of socialist realism share a cinemato-

graphic quality that brings to mind a sequence of film 

frames. Nonetheless, together they do not make up a 

realist or neo-realist film depicting real life but a film 

narrating the rehearsal of a dreamlike reality Soviet 

life tried to fulfill for years: it was a dress rehearsal for 

utopia.


76

 In the tradition of the 

literaturnost’ 

typical of 

Russian-Soviet culture, this was a subtitled rehears-

al: the revolutionary mottos and phraseology were 

present almost everywhere—on billboards, posters 

and flags [cat. 46], some of which were flooded with 

written information (see, for example, cat. 141). 

Socialist realism was a long performance of 

the life that followed the victory over the sun,

 

a mi-



mesis of the 

real 


dress rehearsal for utopia: it was 

not an imitation of the world, but a mimesis of the 

world that should be. The former would have re-

sulted in “realist socialism” or rather “dirty realism” 

(as has been proved) given the fact that the con-

trast between depictions of reality and reality itself 

was unquestionable. The idyllic images of agricul-

tural collectivization and modernization contradict 

real facts of famine and poverty, political purges 

and mass deportation, the assassination of 

kulaks 

and forced labor. 



No. Socialist realism had to “represent life 

in its 


revolutionary transformation

.”

 77



 It was not simply 

a matter of “performing” the life that was being 



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