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The Streets Are Our Palettes: A Tribute to Vladimir Mayakovsky

August 6, 2015 Dave Widgery
From newsreel footage of a Soviet parade, with a wooden model of Vladimir Tatlin's Monument to the Third International (1919-20)

From newsreel footage of a Soviet parade, with a wooden model of Vladimir Tatlin's Monument to the Third International (1919-20)

One of the delights of growing up politically lies in discovering one’s own traditions. In art they were nearly obliterated by Stalinism, declared redundant by the long post-war boom and generally buried in a "modernism" which was often apolitical and trite. It was exhilarating to unearth in Soviet Russia the most genuinely modern of modern art movements and Mayakovsky, the original "hooligan communist".

Vladimir Mayakovsky, the poetic loudspeaker of the Russian Revolution, came to socialist ideas with the enthusiasm of youth. He began to read Engels and illegal pamphlets under his desk-lid when he was 12. When later the same year his school was closed by Military Edict because of the 1905 uprising, he became chief school leaflet distributor. When he made his first contact with the illegal Bolshevik Party, he immediately presented them with his forester father’s shotgun. Aged 15, he was arrested in Moscow for helping to organise the escape of political prisoners from jail and was himself held in Novimsky Prison where he began to write poems. For the following 20 years he served the Revolution as a poet-agitator with the same audacity and passion. And when he shot himself in Moscow in 1930, he died a Bolshevik, brandishing his poems:

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In Classics, August 2015 Tags poetry, futurism, art, visual art, Dave Widgery, Russian Revolution, revolution, radical history

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