Abstrakt: |
The paper provides an analysis of changes in depiction of Soviet leaders by Estonian artists during the period of Soviet occupation of Estonia. More specifically, changes in the iconography of Lenin and Stalin are viewed in light of Alexei Yurchak's concept of performative shift of the Soviet authoritative discourse. During the over 40-year period of Soviet occupation conventions of depicting Lenin and Stalin underwent several notable changes that more or less reflected shifts in the Soviet politics as well as the developments in Estonian arts. The paper argues that changes in the depiction of the leaders amounted to the fundamental meaning and message of these works of art. Especially from the end of the 1960s, an increasingly playful and ironic undertone prevailed. In using the depictions of the Soviet leaders in Estonian art to test the aforementioned theoretical constructions, the paper however concludes that changes in the official discourse in Estonian arts did not wholly conform to the performative shift as described by Yurchak. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |