The Commissar Vanishes Explained

The Commissar Vanishes
The Falsification of Photographs and Art in Stalin's Russia
Author:David King
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English
Subject:Art, history, politics
Publisher:Canongate Books Ltd (United Kingdom)
Metropolitan Books/Henry Holt (United States)
Pub Date:October 1997
Pages:192
Isbn:978-0-86241-724-6
Oclc:59592918

The Commissar Vanishes: The Falsification of Photographs and Art in Stalin's Russia is a 1997 book by David King about the censoring of photographs and fraudulent creation of "photographs" in Joseph Stalin's Soviet Union through silent alteration via airbrushing and other techniques. It has an introduction by Stephen F. Cohen.[1] [2]

Album

Music for David King's Book
The Commissar Vanishes
The Fall of Icarus
Type:studio
Artist:Michael Nyman
Caption:Photo of Isaak Zelensky as censored for Alexander Rodchenko's copy of Ten Years of Uzbekistan
Released:8 November 1999 (United Kingdom)
November 18, 1999 (United States)
Genre:Contemporary classical, minimalism
Label:Virgin Venture, EMI
Prev Title:Wonderland
Prev Year:1999
Next Title:Nabbie's Love
Next Year:1999

Michael Nyman created a companion album of the same title in 1999. The second disc of the two-disc album contains The Fall of Icarus, the score to an eponymous art installation by Peter Greenaway from 1986 which had previously been unreleased. The first disc, The Commissar Vanishes, is a version of The Fall of Icarus that has been defaced similarly to the photographs reproduced in King's book.

Track listing

Disc 1: The Commissar Vanishes

  1. Earth In Turmoil
  2. Jealousy And Revenge
  3. Look Out For An Enemy!
  4. Ordinary Citizens
  5. A Swift Exit

Disc: 2: The Fall of Icarus

  1. Disaster
  2. Wings
  3. Walls
  4. Water
  5. Utopia

Documentary

A documentary was made about David King and The Commissar Vanishes called, Facing the Dead by Gabrielle Pfeiffer. The film was commissioned by Arte and broadcast internationally. It won the "Golden Gate Award" at the San Francisco International Film Festival.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Commissar Vanishes: Falsification of Photographs and Art in Stalin's Russia, Review . Tamara (Oakland University) . Machmut-Jhashi . H-Russia . November 1998 . December 23, 2016.
  2. Book: . Hardcover . October 15, 1997 . David . King . 192 . . 1 . 0805052941,978-0805052947 --> . New York, NY . December 22, 2016.