- Alexander Gerasimov
Alexander Mikhaylovich Gerasimov ( _ru. Александр Михайлович Герасимов) (
August 12 ,1881 —July 23 ,1963 ) was a leading proponent ofSocialist Realism in the visual arts, and paintedStalin as well as other Soviet leaders.Gerasimov was born on
August 12 ,1881 in Kozlov (nowMichurinsk ) inTambov Governorate. He studied at theMoscow School of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture from 1903 to 1915. There he championed traditional realisticrepresentational art against theavant-garde .During
World War I and theRussian Civil War he served in the army. Subsequently he returned to his hometown to become a stage designer, helping to present plays glorifying the Revolution and the Soviet government.In 1925, Gerasimov returned to Moscow and set up a studio, combining techniques of academic realism with an Impressionistic light touch. He favored a style known as heroic realism, which featured images of Revolutionary leaders such as
Lenin as larger-than-life heroes. However, as Stalin tightened his grip on the country, Gerasimov's work descended into pompous official portraits, such as "Stalin and Voroshilov at the Kremlin Wall," for which he won a Stalin Prize in 1934. He produced a large number of heroic portraits ofKliment Voroshilov , to the point thatNikita Khrushchev would later accuse Voroshilov of having spent most of his time in Gerasimov's studio, to the detriment of his responsibilities as People's Commissar of Defense.His heavy-handed leadership of the
Union of Artists of the USSR and theSoviet Academy of Art were notorious, and he was at the forefront of the attacks againstcosmopolitanism andformalism during theZhdanovshchina .Although his excessively fawning portraits of Soviet leaders and his political activities against artists who would not toe his line have gained him a reputation as a political hack, Gerasimov did not entirely lose touch with his genuine artistic abilities. Even at the end of his career, he continued to follow a moody, almost Impressionistic treatment of landscapes, curiously at odds with the stridency of his official portraiture.
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