Best of Fall 2009

A Glance at the Soviet Lifestyle, Cap­tured by Marc Riboud.

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Museum, Moscow, 1960s

This is our third post devoted to Marc Riboud, an out­stand­ing French pho­tog­ra­pher, who trav­eled exten­sively through­out the Soviet Union.  His images cap­tured an array of every­day life episodes from the lives of the Soviet peo­ple.  Here is the first lot — and here is the sec­ond one. As always, click on the mag­ni­fy­ing glass icon to see the pho­tos in detail.

Soviet Cars: His­tory of the Copy-and-Paste Indus­try — Part 3 of 3

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Volga

A good exam­ple of how the ideas to make a new car were born is the story of the fac­tory “Com­mu­nar”. The Min­is­ter of Car Man­u­fac­tur­ing made a call to the fac­tory where design­ers thought over the scheme of a new Ukrain­ian car and lit­er­ally said: “I heard you were going to make a spring sus­pen­sion from the “Volk­swa­gen” but I actu­ally like the Ital­ian Fiat-600”. Shortly the fac­tory com­menced the pro­duc­tion of ZAZ-965 –nearly the exact copy of the Fiat.

Dia­mond Dog’s Run 4,000 miles long: David Bowie in the USSR.

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Sight­see­ing in the USSR

Just like John Lennon or Elton John, in 1970s David Bowie was an iconic fig­ure of the West­ern music scene. Nick­named Chameleon of Pop for his flam­boy­ant out­fits, pale make up and eccen­tric tunes, David Bowie made a train tour of Rus­sia, all the way from Vladi­vos­tok to Moscow, eigh­teen days in a sleeper.  Back in the days, when the Cold War was in its prime, get­ting a per­mis­sion to look behind the Iron Cur­tain was an incred­i­ble phe­nom­e­non by itself. Well, did David  enjoy him­self while in the USSR? Let’s see.

Dirty Danc­ing Soviet Style

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Danc­ing in the Ural Moun­tains, by G. Sorokin.

Just like any­where else in the world, the Soviet young­sters wanted to social­ize, to lis­ten to the music and to dance. The night­clubs were unheard of – any­thing of that kind would have been announced as pro­mot­ing debauch­ery or morally wrong lifestyle habits. So the best one would hope for were the dis­cothe­ques – the spe­cial dance occa­sions, orga­nized by the offi­cials on a weekly basis. They always had a des­ig­nated super­vi­sor – a school prin­ci­pal or a city coun­cil rep­re­sen­ta­tive in charge.

Declas­si­fied: the Great and Pow­er­ful Stalin.

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Smi­ley face.

Joseph Stalin was prob­a­bly one of the most mul­ti­fac­eted, con­tro­ver­sial and yet unknown per­sons in the course of the world his­tory. In Jan­u­ary 1943 Time mag­a­zine fea­tured Stalin as the Per­son of the Year, saying:

The year 1942 was a year of blood and strength. The man whose name means steel in Russ­ian, whose few words of Eng­lish include the Amer­i­can expres­sion “tough guy” was the man of 1942. Only Joseph Stalin fully knew how close Rus­sia stood to defeat in 1942, and only Joseph Stalin fully knew how he brought Rus­sia through.

The Great Patri­otic War: the Vil­lain­ous Hitler’s Plan or the Provokation?

In accor­dance with the offi­cial his­tory the Sec­ond World War  (in Rus­sia called ‘the Great Patri­otic War’) was com­menced on the Soviet ter­ri­tory by Ger­many: the treach­er­ous attack on 22 June, 1941when they invaded into the USSR.  This offi­cial ver­sion of the Soviet Gov­ern­ment is writ­ten in every his­tory book.  At the same time there is numer­ous evi­dence of Stalin’s desire to start the war first with the inten­tion sim­i­lar to Hitler’s . And that is why there is the the­ory that Stalin pro­voked Ger­man aggres­sion against the USSR.

bt7 10 Best of Fall 2009

BT-7 — High Speed Tank

Chris­t­ian Dior in Moscow: a Fleet­ing Sense of Happiness

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Girls just want to have fun!

The Khrushchev’s Thaw was to cover many aspects of the Soviet life, and fash­ion was  one of them. The deci­sion to allow the Soviet fash­ion design­ers to learn off their French coun­ter­parts was made as high as at the gov­ern­ment level, which implic­itly put fash­ion above pol­i­tics or inter­na­tional ide­o­log­i­cal regimes. The colour of the Soviet Union, a generic grey, was about to be mixed up with the mot­ley and lithe palette of the French fashion.

Ethu­si­as­tic Pho­tog­ra­phy from Soviet Rus­sia, 1950s — 1960s.

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Wait­ing for the play off.

Just a very pleas­ant col­lec­tion of pho­tos from a pri­vate fam­ily archive. All pho­tos were taken in 1950s — 1960s, in the streets of Yaroslavl, a small town not far from Moscow. Sim­ple things — out­door sports, fish­ing, swim­ming, enjoy­ing the music or spend­ing time with the fam­ily — these 38 pho­tos are rel­ish­ing small plea­sures and bring­ing a smile to a face.

The 50th Anniver­sary of the Soviet Union in Old Amer­i­can Mags

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Life and Look on the 50th Anniver­sary of the USSR, 1967.

In 1967, when the USSR turned 5o, it was a big day for both the coun­try and the world. The Soviet Union had made it through, despite every­thing — and the world now had to take it seri­ously. The Cold War, which was at its high­est at the time, kept the USSR in the spot­light, too, so the media were more than inter­ested in the young Russ­ian coun­try.  It really is a shame that the writ­ing can­not be deci­phered due to the low res­o­lu­tion of these scans. How­ever, these images  con­vey the atmos­phere of the times quite well — a wild yet sophis­ti­cated coun­try in the eyes of the civilised world.

Pic­tur­ing the Soviet Republics: Moldavia

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Vet­er­ans by A. Simanovsky

No doubt pho­tog­ra­phy was a pop­u­lar art in the USSR. Here and below are pic­tures taken by the peo­ple all over the Soviet state of Mol­davia. Today’s set based on the book called “Mol­da­vian Art of pho­tog­ra­phy”, Kishinev (recently renamed to Chisinau), 1985.


Related posts:

  1. Best of Win­ter 2009  –  2010
  2. Pho­tos of Moscow and Sur­round­ings by Marc Riboud, 1960s
  3. Soviet Brands: The Scent Of Com­mu­nism. Part 1 of 2
  4. Dia­mond Dog’s Run 4,000 miles long: David Bowie in the USSR.
  5. 21+ Depress­ing Pho­tos of Post-Revolutionary Rus­sia by Arkady Shaikhet

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