Tuesday, March 30, 2021

Artists of the Day, March 30, 2021: Designers of the The Russian avant-garde film posters (#1244)

The Russian avant-garde film posters of the mid 1920s to early 1930s are unlike any film posters ever created. Although the period of artistic freedom in the Soviet Union was brief, these powerful, startling images remain among the most brilliant and imaginative posters ever conceived. The Russian film poster artists experimented with the same innovative cinematic techniques used in the films they were advertising, such as extreme closeups, unusual angles, and dramatic proportions. They montaged disparate elements, adding photography to lithography, and juxtaposed the action from one scene with a character from another. They colored human faces with vivid hues, elongated and distorted body shapes, gave animal bodies to humans, and turned film credits into an integral part of the design. There were no rules, except to follow one's imagination.

The 1917 Revolution changed life in Russia politically, socially, and artistically. Art became regarded as an important force in shaping the future of the new state. Slogans like "Art into Life" and "Art into Technology" expressed the popular belief that art had the power to transform lives on every level. It was a time of artistic experimentation, a kind of spontaneous combustion caused by the charged atmosphere and the radical changes in art and life. Diverse art styles, such as constructivism, realism, analytical art, and proletarian art developed simultaneously. Bold new directions in art, including Suprematism, Non-Objectivism, and Cubo-Futurism emerged in this fertile period of change.

The quality of the posters is remarkable considering the artists often had to rush to meet nearly impossible deadlines. Both Vladimir Stenberg and Mikhail Dlugach — two of the most famous Soviet poster artists — recalled that it was not unusual for them to see a film in the afternoon and be required to present the completed poster the very next morning. Furthermore, the equipment for printing the posters was falling apart and the technology was primitive. The only printing presses available pre-dated the 1917 Revolution. Vladimir Stenberg recalled that some of the presses were so shaky that practically everything was held together by string.

The artists often had to create the posters without ever having seen the film. Especially with foreign films, the artists often had to work from only a brief summary of the film, and publicity shots, or a press kit from Hollywood. When one considers that the poster artists assumed their work would be torn down and thrown away after a few weeks, it is astonishing that they continued to strive to maintain such a high standard. Clearly, these innovative flights of the imagination do not deserve to be consigned to oblivion.

In 1932, eight years after Lenin's death, Stalin decreed that the only officially sanctioned type of art would be socialist realism. Both the subject and the artistic method were required to depict a realistic (we might call it an idealistic) portrayal of Soviet life consistent with communist values. Stalin's decree marked the end of the period of avant-garde experimentation represented by the posters in this book. He may have closed the window of creativity, but not before it had illuminated history with some of the most brilliant posters ever created. The imagination, wit, and creativity exhibited in these film posters have yet to be rivaled — anywhere in the world.


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1025, Battleship Potemkin / Alexandr Rodchenko

1924, Books (Please) / A.Rodchenko

1924, John’s Skirts

1924, Possessed / Alexander Ilyich Naumov

1925, Battleship Potemkin / Anton Lavinsky

1926, Miss Mend / Georgy and Vladimir Stenberg

1926. October / Georgii and Vladimir Sternberg

1926, The Journey to Mars / Nikolai Prusakov and Grigori Borisov

1927, Bed and Sofa / Georgii and Vladimir Sternberg

1927, Bella Donna / Alexandr Naumov

1927, Decem- brists / Georgii and Vladimir Sternberg

1927, Memorial to Fallen Leaders / Gustav Klutsis

1927, Miss Mend / Anton Lavinsky

1927, Oil / Alexandr Ilyich Naumov

1927, Sparkakiada / 

1927, Worldly Couples / Georgii and Vladimir Sternberg

1928, A Real Gentleman / Georgii and Vladimir Sternberg

1928, Moulin Rouge / Georgii and Vladimir Sternberg

1928, Pervy Kornet Streshnev / Nikolai Prusakov

1929, 5 minutes / Anatoly Belsky

1929. Man with a Movie Camera / Georgii and Vladimir Sternberg

1929, Ester from Solem / Anatoly Belsky

1929, 5 Minutes / Nikolai Prusakov

1929, Looping the Loop / Georgii and Vladimir Sternberg

 1929, Rechevik. Stikhi (Orator. Verse) / Aleksandr Rodchenko

1929, Saba / Anatoly Belsky

1929, The Happy Canary /

1929, The Man of Fire / Nikolai Prusakov

1929, Trubka Kommunard / Anatoly Belsky

1929, Turksib / Semyon Semyonov-Menes

1930, Miners working to forward Revolution  / Anatoly Belsky

1930, Pipe of the Communards / Nikolai Prusakov

1933, Konveier smerti / Smolyakovsky

1933, The Annenkov Affair/

1941, Battleship Potemkin / Anatoly Belsky

 

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