Picturing the Workers' Olympics and the Spartakiads

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A01=Przemyslaw Strozek
Ancient Greece
Author_Przemyslaw Strozek
avant-garde propaganda art
Category=GTM
Category=JPFC
Category=JPFF
Category=NHD
Category=QDTS
Central European modernism
Communist Sport
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
FPT
Hungarian Olympic
International Festival of Workers' Sports Associations
interwar cultural history
John Heartfield
Kassak and Moholy-Nagy
Kuhle Wampe
Mass Sporting Events
Moholy Nagy's Work
Moholy Nagy’s Work
MTE
Olympic Art Competitions
Physical Culture
proletarian visual culture
Red Man
Red Megaphones
Red Sport
Red Sport International
Red Vienna
socialist sport movements
Socialist Workers' Sport International
Sokol
Soviet Constructivists
Sport Associations
Sport Festival
Sport Propaganda
Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden
visual analysis of workers' sporting events
Visual Propaganda
Vkhutemas
Vsevolod Mikhels
Weimar Germany
Worker Athlete
Workers' Olympics
workers' physical education
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032010595
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Sep 2022
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This volume focuses on the modernist and avant-garde engagement with workers’ sport events that were organised or were planned to be organised in the cities of Central Europe and the USSR in the period of 1920–1932: Frankfurt am Main – Vienna – Moscow – Prague – Budapest – Berlin.

During the 1920s and 1930s, two organisations of workers’ sport operated: the Lucerne Sport International/Socialist Workers’ Sport International and the Red Sport International, which held the socialist Workers’ Olympics and the communist Spartakiads, respectively. These events were not aimed at cultivating national victories and individual athletic records, but at mobilising workers for the class struggle and at creating new culture for the working class. This book examines the visual propaganda of the Workers’ Olympics and the Spartakiads expressed through paintings, sculptures, prints, illustrations, posters, postcards, photomontages, photographs, films, theatre and architectural projects. It emphasises the significance of workers’ sport for the artistic and social changes within a utopian project of a new culture, as visualised by the modernist and avant-garde artists, including Varvara Stepanova, Gustav Klucis, and Otto Nagel.

This volume is of great use to students and scholars of the history of sport, art history and cultural history in interwar Europe and the Soviet Union.

Przemysław Strożek is an Assistant Professor at the Institute of Art of the Polish Academy of Sciences and an Associate Researcher and curator at the Archiv der Avantgarden, Dresden. He was a Fulbright fellow at the University of Georgia, a fellow at the Accademia dei Lincei and recipient of a Korea Foundation fellowship. He is the author of several dozen academic articles, and published extensively his research on sport and the avant-garde, as well as on sport and contemporary art. Together with Andreas Kramer he has co-edited Sport and the European Avant-Garde (1900–1945). He has curated numerous exhibitions, including an exhibition on Polish-Moroccan artistic relations at the Zachęta – National Gallery of Art in Warsaw.

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