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


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June. Deineka participates in two major Soviet 

exhibitions: the Moscow version of 

15 Years of Art-

ists of the RSFSR (opens June 27) and 15 Years of 

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Fundación Juan March



the RKKA (Workers and Peasants Red Army) (opens 

June 30), with extensive discussion of his work in 

the press. 

September 1. Deineka is appointed chair of the 

Poster Department of the Polygraphic Institute. 



Fall. While on an off icially commissioned trip to 

visit collective farms, Deineka creates a series of 

five atypically melancholy paintings known as the 

Dry Leaves cycle [cat. 213]. They are possibly 

connected to the death of his father at that time. 

January. The Second Five-Year Plan begins (1933–

38).


21 March. The Council of People’s Commissars 

(Sovnarkom) approves the project for the Moscow 

Metro.

September 30. Birth of the artist Ilya Kabakov in 

Dnepropetrovsk (Ukraine).



October. Ivan Bunin becomes the first Russian 

author to be awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature.

The article “Formalism in Painting” by Osip Beskin 

is published in the third issue of the newspaper 

Iskusstv. A booklet of the same name is also pub-

lished later in the year. Shevchenko, Shterenberg, 

Istomin, Fonvizin, Drevin, Udal’tsova, Goncharov, 

Tyshler, Labas, Punin, Filonov, Malevich, Kliun and 

other artists are identified as formalists. 

1934

February 11. The newspaper 

Sovetskoe iskusstvo 

features a letter written by Henri Matisse recount-

ing his impressions of photographs of works by 

Soviet artists sent to him by VOKS: “I believe Deine-

ka is the most talented of them all and the most 

advanced in his artistic development.”

May 12. The 19th Venice Biennale opens, including 

a number of paintings by Deineka. On May 17, the 

Italian Ministry of Education purchases Deineka’s 

painting 

Female Race priced at 8,000 lire for a 

gallery in Rome.



June 14. He is appointed chair of Monumental 

Painting at the Polygraphic Institute, a position he 

holds until 1936.

Summer. In the summer, he meets Serafima 

Lycheva (1906–1992), his partner of many years.



August 1. He is awarded an off icial commission to 

visit the Soviet navy fleet in Sevastopol, where he 

gathers material for forthcoming state exhibitions. 

Together with his friend, the artist Fedor Bogorod-

skii, he sees navy ships and goes on training flights, 

drawing pencil sketches in the cockpit. In a letter 

to Serafima Lycheva, he writes: “I never leave Sev-

astopol . . . I wake up at six or seven in the morning 

and go for a swim. On my way there I usually buy 

fruit at a market. I paint a sketch with watercolors 

and redo it at home using oil painting. After lunch 

I take my sketchbook and spend some time at 

Dinamo [an ocean swimming pool]. Before the sun 

sets in the evening, I finish the work of the day—I 

polish it . . . I have a stack of sketches: the sea, 

Sevastopol, several hydroplanes, sports and, once 

again, the sea. If I could hang them in your room, 

the sun of Sevastopol would brighten your winter” 

(catalogue of the exhibition at the State Tretyakov 

Gallery, [Moscow, 2010], 210). The painting Future 

Pilots (1938) [cat. 233] would be the last of a series 

of works he completed from his sketches in 

Sevastopol. 

September 2. Deineka is named a member of the 

exhibition committee for the show 

The Art of So-

viet Russia scheduled to take place in Philadelphia, 

organized by VOKS, the Pennsylvania Museum of 

Art and the American-Russian Institute of Philadel-

phia (ARI). He serves on the jury to select works 

for the exhibition, and is chosen to travel to Phila-

delphia as an off icial Soviet representative of the 

exhibition. In preparation for his trip to the United 

States, he begins to study English in the fall. On 

October 22, he receives passport number 122769, 



1. Aleksandr Deineka. 

We will 


Build the Powerful Soviet 

Dirigible “Klim Voroshilov”, 

1930. Collection Merrill 

C. Berman [cat. 205]



2. Red Army Field-Marshals 

Voroshilov and Budionny, 1921. 

Fundación José María Castañé

3. Aleksandr Deineka. 

We Demand Universal 

Compulsory Education, 

1930. Poster. Lithography



4. Aleksandr Deineka, ca. 1930

5. Aleksandr Deineka in 

Crimea, early 1930s



6. Famine in the Volga region, 

ca. 1932–33. Fundación 

José María Castañé

7. Aleksandr Deineka. 

Dinamo. 


Sevastopol, 1934. Watercolor 

on paper, 44.2 x 59.8 cm. State 

Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow

8. Aleksandr Deineka with 

his friend, the artist Fedor 

Bogorodskii during their 

off icial commission to 

visit the Soviet navy fleet 

in Sevastopol, 1934



9. Maxim Gorky and Stalin. 

Illustration in the book 

Stalin, 1939. Fundación José 

María Castañé [cat. 236]



10. Aleksandr Deineka. 

Sevastopol. Night, 1934. 

Tempera, watercolor and 

white lead on paper. State 

Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow

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April 12. Deineka arrives in Italy and stays at the 

Hotel di Londra & Cargill, located near Villa 

Borghese in Rome. He writes an enthusiastic let-

ter to Serafima Lycheva on Roman architecture. 

In regards to modern architecture, the Mussolini 

Stadium grasps his attention for its “amplitude and 

planimetry.” Three-day sojourn in Florence.

May 27. During a lecture at the Club of Masters 

of the Arts in Moscow, he states that America and 

American art are far more interesting than France 

and French art; he discusses the Regionalists and 

the John Reed Club artists, and especially praises 

the work of Thomas Hart Benton.



June 8. The USSR attaché in Washington, Aleksei 

Neiman, notifies Deineka the drawings exhibited at 

Studio House will be returned except for three that 

were sold, two of which were purchased by Mrs. 

Ellis Longworth, President Theodore Roosevelt’s 

daughter. 



July. Deineka travels to the Donbass region on an 

off icial commission to collect material for paint-

ings, resulting in such works as Lunch Break in the 

Donbass and Collective Farm Woman on a Bicycle 

[cat. 225]

.

December 15. Deineka’s first solo exhibition in the 

USSR—featuring over one hundred works— opens 

at the All-Russian Union of Cooperative Partner-

ships of Visual Art Workers (Vsekokhudozhnik). The 

exhibition is widely and positively reviewed. On 

December 26, the State Art Acquisition Commis-

sion purchases nine works on view at the show. 

Deineka illustrates 

Ogon’ (The Fire) [cat. 92], 

Russian translation of the novel 

Le Feu by the 

French writer Henri Barbusse.

May 14. The Gor’kovskaia line linking Sokolniki to 

the Gorky Central Park of Culture and Leisure, the 

first line of the Moscow Metro under the general 

design of Lazar Kaganovich, is inaugurated. 



May 15. Kazimir Malevich dies in Leningrad.

American commission—where I will sketch some 

drawings for an upscale magazine . . .” (catalogue 

of the exhibition at the State Tretyakov Gallery, 

[Moscow, 2010], 212).

February 20. He travels to Lake Placid, New York, 

following an invitation by 

Vanity Fair magazine to 

sketch a series of drawings.



March 4. Deineka attends the opening of the con-

tinuation of the exhibition 

The Art of Soviet Russia 

at the Baltimore Museum of Art, Maryland, accom-

panied by Ambassador Troianovskii and his wife. 

March 5. Deineka attends a dinner given in his 

honor at the Soviet Embassy, where a small show 

of his works also takes place. 

March 9. Deineka writes to Serafima Lycheva from 

New York: “I will say goodbye to America in three 

days and then head to Europe . . . I will be an ocean 

closer to Moscow… I have returned from Washing-

ton tonight where an exhibition of my works was 

held at the Embassy . . . The following day, I had 

to attend a fancy reception. I begged Troianovskii 

not to make me wear white tie, and in the end we 

both decided on a tuxedo. Look at what a dandy 

I’ve become, ha ha!” (catalogue of the exhibition at 

the State Tretyakov Gallery, [Moscow, 2010], 210). 

In total, three solo exhibitions of Deineka’s works 

on paper—of which he sells twelve—take place in 

the United States, at the Art Alliance in Philadelphia 

and at the Soviet Embassy and Studio House gal-

lery in Washington, DC. He returns with numerous 

sketches of American people, cities, and high-

ways—material he uses in compositions for paint-

ings later that year.

March 13. Deineka leaves New York by boat and 

arrives in France on March 21. In Paris, he goes to 

the Louvre on six diff erent occasions and meets 

the artists Kliment Red’ko and Mikhail Larionov. An 

exhibition of his work is held at a gallery in Paris.

issued and signed by G. Iagoda, the person in 

charge of the VTSIK Presidium. The passport in-

cludes the following description: “Average height. 

Grey eyes. Ordinary nose. Brown hair” (the artist’s 

family name is spelled Deineko).



October 18. The

 33rd Carnegie International exhi-

bition

 opens at the Carnegie Institute in Pittsburgh; 



Deineka is awarded an Honorable Mention for his 

painting 

On the Balcony (1931) [cat. 212]. Salvador 

Dalí was also among those who received a prize 

for his painting 

Eléments énigmatiques dans un 

paysage.

December 11. A notice in the newspaper 

Vecher-


niaia Moskva states that Deineka left for the United 

States the day before and would be staying there 

for three months. He arrives in New York on De-

cember 22. 

The Art of Soviet Russia opens at the 

Pennsylvania Museum on December 15, and travels 

to seventeen cities in the United States and Cana-

da over the two following years. 

Deineka works on a series of monumental panels 

depicting “The Revolution in the Village” for the 

assembly hall at the Commissariat of Agriculture 

(Narkomzem) in Moscow. He produces four oil 

sketches: 

Conversation of the Kolkoz Brigade [cat. 

223]

, Two Classes, Peasant’s Revolt and The Har-



vest (the location of the latter two is unknown). The 

commission falls through and the panels are never 

completed. As part of his work on this project, he 

is sent on an off icial commission to visit collective 

farms. 

January 8. The symbolist writer Andrei Belyi dies in 

Moscow.


March 9. The first Russian cosmonaut Iurii Gagarin 

is born in Klushino, near Moscow.



August 17. During the First All-Union Congress of 

Soviet Writers, Maxim Gorky declares socialist real-

ism the off icial style of the Soviet Union, “realist in 

form, socialist in content.”



September 18. The Soviet Union joins the League 

of Nations. 



November 24. The composer Alfred Schnittke is 

born in Engels (Saratov Region). 



December 1. The assassination of Politburo mem-

ber Sergei Kirov in Leningrad inaugurates a pe-

riod of political oppression and purges that lasts 

through 1938. 

Isaak Brodskii is appointed director of the Russian 

Academy of Arts. 



1935

January 2–22. Deineka travels from New York to 

Philadelphia, where he participates in receptions 

and lunches associated with the exhibition 

The Art 


of Soviet Russia and meetings with local artists and 

patrons. 



January 22 – February 7. He stays in New York, 

making sketches and meeting artists.



February 7. He returns to Philadelphia to prepare 

for a solo exhibition of his watercolors at the Art 

Alliance, which opens on February 11. He shows 

forty-five works, both Russian watercolors that he 

had brought with him and recent works featuring 

American themes. 



February 14. He writes to Serafima Lycheva from 

Philadelphia: “I must confess I dream of a holiday 

in some town near Moscow or Crimea. You can’t 

imagine how hard I’ve had to work! I haven’t writ-

ten in so long because I was getting ready for the 

show. Even here that’s fairly complicated, and then 

Troianovskii [the Soviet ambassador] came to the 

show . . . the opening went well. For two and a half 

hours I stood and shook hands with high and mid-

dle class ladies and gentlemen, pretty tiring, 

and then dinner, also standing around with a plate 

. . . This week I will stay in Philadelphia until the 

20th. Then I will go to a small sports facility—an 

1. Aleksandr Deineka. 

Roman Plaza, 1935. 

Watercolor and gouache 

on paper, 37.8 x 53.5 

cm. State Tretyakov 

Gallery, Moscow



2. Drawing of Paris 

executed during Deineka’s 

trip in 1935. Illustration 

from Aleksandr Deineka’s 

book, 

On My Working 



Practice, 1969 [cat. 248]

3. Drawings of Roman 

priests executed 

during Deineka’s trip in 

1935. Illustration from 

Aleksandr Deineka’s 

book, 


On My Working 

Practice, 1969 [cat. 248]



4. Catalogue of the 

A. 


Deineka Exhibition, 

Vsekokhudozhnik, 

Moscow, 1935; 

Academy of Fine Arts 

of Leningrad, 1936

5. The director of the first 

metro line in Moscow, 

Lazar Kaganovich, 

ca. 1940. Fundación 

José María Castañé

6. Stalin at the Bolshoi 

Theater in Moscow, 1936

(Soyuzfoto). Fundación 

José María Castañé



7. Extraordinary 8th 

Congress of Soviets, 1936 

(Soyuzfoto). Fundación 

José María Castañé

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Fundación Juan March



August 31. Aleksei Stakhanov, a miner from the 

Donbass, mines 102 tons of coal in 5 hours and 45 

minutes (14 times his quota), founding what be-

came known as the Stakhanovite movement: the 

drive for workers to exceed production targets to 

boost the success of the Five-Year Plans. Stakhano-

vites were rewarded with public accolades and rare 

consumer goods. 



November. Moscow Regional Union of Soviet 

Artists conference “On the Problem of the Soviet 

Portrait.” In their lectures, David Shterenberg, 

Aleksandr Deineka and Il’ia Erenburg condemn 

MOSSKh’s authority and the political concessions 

and privileges given to a small and select group of 

artists. 

1936

January. The cover of 

Vanity Fair features a draw-

ing by Deineka, credited as: “Cover design: 

Skiing 


at Lake Placid by Deyneka.”

February 12. Deineka’s solo exhibition from 

Vsekokhudozhnik opens at the Academy of Arts in 

Leningrad.

June. Campaign against formalism. The sixth is-

sue of the magazine 

Pod znamenem marksizma 

features an article by Polikarp Lebedev entitled 

“Against Formalism in Art,” in which the author 

states: “The influence of formalism in Soviet paint-

ing sometimes reaches artists whose artwork is 

not formalist by definition. See, for example, the 

work of S. Gerasimov or A. Deineka . . . Signs of 

formalism in Soviet art are the remnants of capital-

ism, which is particularly hostile to the socialist 

cause.” A number of unsigned editorial notes are 

published in 

Pravda, including “Chaos Instead of 

Music” (January 28), against the composer Dmitrii 

Shostakovich, “Falseness in Ballet” (February 8), 

“Cacophony in Architecture” (February 20) and “On 

Scribbling Artists” (March 1). The last in the series, 

“The Formalist Condition of Painting,” was signed 

by Vladimir Kemenov.



Summer. Deineka travels to Sevastopol with the 

painters Georgii Nisskii and Fedor Bogorodskii and 

draws sketches during his stay.

October 27. Deineka takes part in a meeting orga-

nized by the Tretyakov Gallery to address the prob-

lem of Soviet exhibitions. “In foreign countries, in 

New York for example . . . very competent people 

purchase works of art after conducting a rigorous 

selection process. But once paintings are hung in 

a museum, it is not with the concern that eventu-

ally they will be removed because an artist may be 

a genius today but a nobody tomorrow. This idea 

does not exist. The piece will undoubtedly become 

part of the history of art in two or three years. So 

why should I care about what is written about me 

or the 

Defense of Petrograd for example? It can be 



hung or removed, but it has already fulfilled its his-

torical purpose. It may be called formalist, rational-

ist or heroic-realism, but no matter, it has entered 

history” (RGALI, Russian State Archive of Literature 

and Art, F. 990, op. 2, d. 10, 23–24).

November 17. Deineka signs a contract with the 

Soviet section of the Paris International Exhibition 

(

Exposition Internationale des Arts et Techniques 



dans la Vie Moderne) planned for 1937 to produce 

designs for two monumental panels for the Soviet 

Pavilion, on “National Festivities” and “Leading 

Figures.” 

Also in 1936, Deineka is appointed director of the 

Monumental Painting Workshop at the Moscow 

Institute of Fine Arts, a position he holds until 

1946.


March 21. Composer Aleksandr Glazunov dies in 

Neuilly-sur-Seine, near Paris.



June 18. Russian novelist and playwright Maxim 

Gorky dies in his country villa near Moscow.



November. Shostakovich composes the music 

score for the play 

Hail Spain!, written by former 

Proletkul’t Theater literary manager and director, 

Aleksandr Afinogenov. It is a drama centered on 

the figure of Dolores Ibárruri, better known as “La 

Pasionaria.” In August, the USSR had decided to 

intervene in the Spanish Civil War in support of the 

socialist Republicans.

December 5. A new constitution, known as the 

Stalin Constitution, is adopted at the 8th Extraordi-

nary Soviet Congress. 

Beginning of the Great Purge (Ezhovshchina or 

Great Terror), a campaign of repression and politi-

cal persecution carried out in the USSR between 

1936 and 1938. Members and ex-members of the 

Communist Party were arrested and tried in Mos-

cow, accused of conspiring with Western countries 

to betray the Soviet Union and assassinate Stalin 

as well as other Soviet leaders. The purge also 

extended to peasants (the largest single group of 

those arrested and killed), Red Army off icers, the 

intelligentsia, minority groups and others. Histori-

ans disagree on the exact numbers, but about 45% 

of those arrested were executed, while most others 

were sentenced to hard labor camps; estimates of 

total deaths range from approximately 950,000 to 

1.2 million. 

1937

March 7. Deineka signs another agreement with the 

Soviet section of the Paris International Exhibition 

to produce an enormous panel on the theme of 

“National Festivities.” In a letter addressed to Serafi-

ma Lycheva, he writes: “I’m going to have to paint a 

7 x 12 meter panel here. Not in Paris, nuh-uh . . .” He 

later wrote “[It] had to be ‘visible’ from all rooms, 

as determined by the architect, and should also 

conclude the exhibition . . . I never saw the entire 

work, not when painting it in the given conditions 

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of light and perspective [Deineka had to paint it in 

cramped quarters under artificial light], nor when it 

was installed in Paris. Only some photographs from 

Paris have given me a vague impression of what it 

looked like” (A. Deineka, 

On My Working Practice 

[Moscow, 1961], 36–37). Entitled 

Stakhanovites, it 

was exhibited in the final room of the Soviet Pavil-

ion, which was famously topped by Vera Mukhina’s 

monumental sculpture 

The Worker and Collective 

Farm Woman. Guernica by Pablo Picasso was on 

display at the Spanish Pavilion. On June 15, 1938, 

Deineka’s mural is awarded the gold medal in the 

painting category. 

March 28

A. Deineka, a monograph on the artist 

by Boris Nikiforov, is published with a print run of 

4,000 copies. 



July 8. Deineka signs an agreement with the orga-

nizing committee of the exhibition 

20 Years of the 

Workers and Peasants Red Army (RKKA) and the 

Navy to produce the works Lenin on an Outing with 

Children and Future Pilots [cat. 233], for which he 

receives 10,000 rubles. 

He begins the mural paintings 

Running through 

the Field and The Sports Parade for the Red Army 

House in Minsk. 

He receives the commission to produce mosaics 

for the Maiakovskaia metro station. 


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