The period from 1932 to 1941 (to the beginning of the Great Patriotic War of 1941-1945) is celebrated as a time when paintings dealing with themes from revolutionary history and contemporary life predominated. Artists tried to make a deep social analysis of the events of the past, and to bring out the characteristic features of contemporary life in generalized images. The passion for a “documentary” approach to the phenomena of life, to the portrayal of only separate facts gave way to efforts to produce works in which philosophical generalization prevailed. At this time were created the
Those were the years when M. Nesterov, P. Korin, I.Grabar and P. Konchalovsky, all artists who had attained fame even before the Revolution, produced their best works, among which we should, first of all, mention a gallery of portraits of Soviet intelligentsia, people of active creative thought. The traditions of their art can easily be traced in Russian painting.
The artists of the older generation, whose life and work are connected with their native towns or villages, made an immense contribution to the development of the thematic picture. They turned their attention chiefly to the life of the peasantry, of which they had an excellent knowledge. Among the artists in the autonomous republics of the RSFSR Ts.Sampilov of Buryatia showed himself to be an original master of genre painting.
The upsurge in the life of society found powerful expression in V. Mukhina’s world-famous sculpture
The victory of the method of socialist realism in graphic art, first and foremost in book illustration, meant that artists tried to reveal human feelings, to show the people at work, to give a truthful, all-round image of their time. The proclamation of historical truth, of lofty humanistic ideals formed the basis of such cycles as D.Shmarinov’s illustrations to Dostoevsky’s writings and to Alexey Tolstoy’s novel
The Great Patriotic War of 1941-1945 did not halt the development of Soviet art. A heightened sense of patriotism imbues the art of this period. Together with the rest of the people artists participated in the fight against the fascist invaders. Some of them went to the front, where they recorded war episodes, while others worked on the staff of military newspapers or at the workshops producing the TASS window displays.