Originally posted by General Ludd
Yeah, it's about censorship not outright opposition to all art.
Plato would censor all art that does not foster what he considers positive human traits. Hitler would censor art that does not glorify germany and his social order, and Stalin would censor art that does not follow social realism and glorify industry.
Yeah, it's about censorship not outright opposition to all art.
Plato would censor all art that does not foster what he considers positive human traits. Hitler would censor art that does not glorify germany and his social order, and Stalin would censor art that does not follow social realism and glorify industry.
Well, yeah, Hitler and Stalin wanted to keep the artists painting, and all that. And they used architects for major buildings, etc. But I think what the OP was getting at was that most of what they produced was pretty bad. Socialist realism, aryan youth kitsch, etc. Esp in the plastic arts. In music, they tended to give problems even to composers who were on "their side" eg Shostakovich. Theres something about 20th c totalitarianism at least, the tendency to politicize everything, that makes them diff wrt the arts than "traditional monarchies". Or than Bonapartism. I cant think of great work coming out of "traditional authoritarians" in the 20th c (like Franco spain), though that may have something to do with the small size and difficult material position most such have been in. Or it may be something else. Also not sure about "communism lite" - Solzenytisn was published under Kruschev, but im not aware of a flowering of the plastic arts then.
Film of course is totally different - Eisenstein, Wertmuller (sp?) A medium that just matched totalitarian propaganda needs so well, that totalitarian regiimes actually advanced the art.
Comment