The Beauty of a Soviet Body

fst 500x328 The Beauty of a Soviet Body

Exer­cis­ing in the sun

I know that today is a remark­able day for the coun­try — a year ago we were com­mem­o­rat­ing the birth of the USSR as an out­come of the Great Octo­ber Social­ist Rev­o­lu­tion of 1917, and I was going to come up with a similar-themed post today as well. But then I stum­bled upon these pho­tographs and decided that they are too pre­cious not to be shared. So  here’s a dozen of pho­tos of young, strong, sexy Soviet bod­ies instead.

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Think Big? No, Even Bigger!

1st 500x382 Think Big? No, Even Bigger!

“New Moscow”, by Tschu­sev and Zholtovsky, was devel­oped in 1917 – 1924.

We have come across a few pri­vate scans of a book “New Moscow” pub­lished in 1982. Just after the Rev­o­lu­tion of 1917 the new gov­ern­ment offi­cials were very keen to change every­thing around — even more so, they wanted to raze the exist­ing sys­tem to the ground and build a new one. So the archi­tects were busy think­ing big — and big­ger — for the new Soviet country.

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Take Me To The River!

Late 1950s was an inter­est­ing epoch for the Soviet Union. The death of Stalin was like a begin­ning to a new era, “the Thaw” of Khrushchev, the very first signs of the Cold War and the famous Ful­ton speech of Churchill — all of those were the signs of uneasy times com­ing up. But just before the Iron Cur­tain fell heav­ily, Rus­sia was the place to visit — and we are very grate­ful to the Life mag­a­zine pho­tog­ra­phers who took plen­ti­ful pho­tos for us.

So we are going to make a 50 year leap into the past to the mid-Russia region of the Volga river — here, the sparkly brand new ships were mak­ing their first cruises. So — full throttle!

Krylov ship capt palkin 322x500 Take Me To The River!

Cap­tain Palkin on a Maiden Voy­age of Krylov Ship. 1958.

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City of UFA: Then and Now

blue on pushkina 500x312 City of UFA: Then and Now

A merchant’s house. Early twenties.

center 20 500x316 City of UFA: Then and Now

A her­itage build­ing now

The city of Ufa, the cap­i­tal of Bashkiria, is a town with the pop­u­la­tion of just over a mil­lion, at about 1500 km dis­tance from Moscow. It is beau­ti­fully set at the con­flu­ence of the Belaya and Ufa rivers, on low hills to the west of South­ern Urals. The city was founded in 1574 at the orders of Ivan the Ter­ri­ble, and the name mean­ing “small” in Tur­kic. It is a well kept city with lots of green­ery, wide alleys, parks and plen­ti­ful his­toric buildings.

Today’s post is a lit­tle dif­fer­ent from our usual for­mat, as the mod­ern pic­tures of the city are, well, mod­ern and not of the Soviet epoch. It is still nice to see, how­ever, how the city has been chang­ing over the past hun­dred years  —  and the old pho­tographs are still full of life and very easy on the eye.

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Calendar of 1964: Us and Them.

An old cal­en­dar of 1964 pic­tur­ing a set of remark­able cit­i­zens of the world: a Soviet per­son next to its Amer­i­can coun­ter­part. Sadly there is no anno­ta­tion left to fig­ure what the mes­sage was — infor­ma­tive, pro­pa­gan­dist or other, so the faces below are torn out of con­text. But it is still nice to have a look at some Soviet artist’s work.

It would have been a brief post, so we thought we’d include the major achieve­ments of these great men.

001w26gh1 370x500 Calendar of 1964: Us and Them.

Movie Pro­duc­ers: Sergey Eisen­stein & David W Grifith

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