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Saturday, December 16, 2017

Hot on the heels of Russia's Revolutionary sculptor, Ivan Shadr ...
src: cdn.rbth.com

The Girl with an Oar (Russian: ??????? ? ??????) is an archetypal example of Socialist Realism in outdoors architecture of the Soviet Union, "an idiom of the Soviet kitsch". Numerous gypsum alabaster versions authored by Ivan Shadr and Romuald Iodko adorned Soviet parks of culture and recreation, and young pioneer camps.

Seen as a symbol of Soviet erotica and totalitarianism today, it was part of the monumental propaganda of sports, a model of a healthy person, ubiquitous in Soviet arts of late 1920s-1930s.

The first Girl with an Oar by Shadr was that of a naked girl. It was heavily criticized for being "too vulgar". It was destroyed and known only from a single photo. The second one was naked as well, "more chaste" but still naked. Initially installed in Gorky Park, Moscow, it was criticized as well and eventually "disappeared", and Shadr made another copy to be installed in Luhansk, Ukrainian SSR

The popular stereotype of the Girl with an Oar is the one in a swimsuit, created by Romuald Iodko.


Video Girl with an Oar



References

Source of article : Wikipedia