Author

Publication

1997 - Metropolitan Books, New York, United States

Language

English

Word Count

48,000 words, Guess

Page Count

192 pages

Identifiers

and 3 more
  • Library of Congress Control Number97020832
  • Goodreads1606154
  • LibraryThing8309997

Classifications

  • DDC303.3/76
  • LCCTR85

Description

The Commissar Vanishes offers a chilling look at how one man - Joseph Stalin - manipulated the science of photography to advance his own political career and to erase the memory of his victims. On Stalin's orders, purged rivals were airbrushed from group portraits, and crowd scenes were altered to depict even greater legions of the faithful. In one famous image, several Party members disappeared from an official photograph, to be replaced by a sylvan glade. For the past three decades, author and photohistorian David King has assembled the world's largest archive of photographs, posters, and paintings from the Soviet era. His collection has grown to more than a quarter of a million images, the best of which have been selected for The Commissar Vanishes. The efforts of the Kremlin airbrushers were often unintentionally hilarious. A 1919 photograph showing a large crowd of Bolsheviks clustered around Lenin, for example, became, with the aid of the retoucher, an intimate portrait of Lenin and Stalin sitting alone, and then, in a later version, of Stalin by himself. The Commissar Vanishes is nothing less than the history of the Soviet Union, as retold through falsified images, many of them published here for the first time outside Russia. In each case, the juxtaposition of the original and the doctored images yields a terrifying - and often tragically funny - insight into one of the darkest chapters of modern history.

Subjects

Topics

HistoryForgeriesCensorshipRetouchingPhotographyPhotographsArt, forgeries

Places

Times

Other Editions

  • The commissar vanishes: the falsification of photographs and art in Stalin's Russia : photographs from the David King CollectionMetropolitan Books1997-01-01

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