For many years
the name of Max Penson remained practically unknown
in the world, but in reality his works deserve
to be mentioned alongside those of Alexander
Rodchenko and other great Soviet Photographers of the
1920s and 1930s.
Max Penson was born in 1893 in Velizh near
Vitebsk, the latter city being the birth-place
of Marc Chagall. After learning to read and write
completely on his own, in 1907 he entered
the Velizh Town School which he finished in 1911.
He later studied at the College of Art and
Industry of the Antokolski Society in Vilno (now
Vilnius, Lithuania).
In 1915 the outbreak of World War
I and the rising wave of Jewish pogroms forced the
young artist to move to Middle Asia, to the
town of Kokand. In Uzbekistan Max Penson worked for
some time as an accountant and taught drawing
at local schools.
In 1921 Max Penson was presented with
a camera. This event changed his life. He almost
entirely ceased to paint and draw, and tried
to master the technique of photography.
In 1923 Max Penson moved to Tashkent,
where he would spent a lot of time with local
professional photographers, who had their own studios. However
he himself got increasingly interested in the genre
of photo-report.
From 1926 to 1949 Max Penson worked
as a photographer for the Newspaper “Pravda Vostoka“
(“Truth of the East”), creating a unique
photo-chronicle of Uzbekistan.
All these years his photographs were not only published
daily in his newspaper, but, through the TASS (Telegraph
Agency of the Soviet Union) Agency, appeared
in various illustrated editions of the country,
including the legendary magazine „USSR under Construction”.
One of its issues (1933, No 10) was based almost
entirely on works by Max Penson. With all the
numerous publications, however, the photographer, who scarcely
ever left Uzbekistan, remained alienated from the intense
exhibition activities that in those years were taking
place in Leningrad and particularly in Moscow.
As a result he was not represented
at foreign exhibitions, where people like Alexander
Rodchenko and El Lissitzky showed their works. Only
in 1937 his photo “Uzbek Madonna” was awarded
a gold medal at the Paris World Fair.
In those years a photographer who worked for the press
was expected to hand over to the publishers just
a small print, which did not demand any artistic
improvements. In this light it is interesting
to note that for more than a quarter
of a century Max Penson daily made for his own
personal use large exhibition prints, experimenting with
different techniques. The results turned out
to be quite fascinating and could finally
be appreciated only in the late 1980s,
when his archive was rediscovered. Becoming
a photo-reporter, Max Penson, who was
a real workaholic (the extant archive has some 50
thousand negatives), remained an artist throughout
his life, an artist, whose goal was not just
to record the radical changes that took place
in Uzbek life. His ambition was, rather, to turn
each shot into an artistic metaphor, giving
it perfect aesthetic form.
His oeuvre was influenced not just by the leaders
of Soviet photography of the 1920s and
30s — both Pictorialists and Modernists,
whose works he could see in print, but also
by the experience of earlier painters. He never
parted with catalogues reproducing masterpieces of the
Italian Renaissance, particularly admiring Michelangelo,
as well as the famous 18th and
19th century artists of the French School.
Uzbekistan, which joined the Soviet Union in 1924,
became a second home-land for Max Penson.
He had a perfect knowledge of both local
language and history. Returning from the shooting
of a movie (which was never completed) about the
Grand Fergana Canal, Sergei Eisenstein wrote:
“it is impossible to talk about Fergana without
mentioning the omnipresent Penson, who crossed Uzbekistan back
and forth with his camera. His archive, unique in every
way, contains materials which give us an opportunity
to follow one of the historical periods of the
republic year by year, page by page. The artistic
development of Max Penson, his whole life were connected
with this remarkable country”.
In the 1920s-1940s Middle Asia, and primarily
Uzbekistan, was an important theme for Soviet ideological
propaganda. The transition from feudalism to socialism,
which happened in so brief a period
in this Soviet Republic, was expected to illustrate
the infinite potential of the new power. Uzbek women, who
took off their yashmaks and began to do sports and
military exercise, the fight against illiteracy, traditional
agriculture being replaced by industry — all these
achievements, often reached with brutal means, were
to be visually recorded and presented before the
populace, supporting the faith in the demiurgic nature
of the Soviet system. This is why crews of the
best Soviet cinematographers and photographers were regularly
sent to Uzbekistan — among the latter were Max
Alpert, Alexander Khlebnikov, Arkadi Shaikhet and Georgi
Zelma.
Max Penson was unique, because he was
a photographer, who witnessed all these changes
in Uzbekistan from within. This is why his subjects
are so amazingly varied, just as his aesthetic, when
he chooses the exactly adequate approach and form for
each of his shots. Looking at Penson’s oeuvre, one
can easily follow the evolution of Soviet photography
in the 1920s and 1930s —
from Pictorialism and Modernism to Socialist Realism.
Penson uses the Pictorial manner to shoot subjects
that are related to Uzbekistan’s history. These are:
digging irrigation canals, which in Soviet Uzbekistan was
done just the way it was centuries ago — with the
help of a hoe; national games and celebrations;
portraits — mainly of old men, the last defenders
of traditional customs. The aesthetic
of Pictorialism, which was persecuted in the
1930s primarily for its preoccupation with the
past, with preserving individual and historical values, was
disliked by the authorities as something opposing
the new myths, the faith in the “bright future”. However
Max Penson continued turning to it until the late
1930s.
“New” Uzbekistan, on the other hand, connected not
only with industrialization bur also with the process
of introducing an unprecedented form
of collective mentality, is portrayed by Max
Penson with all the splendid innovations of Soviet
Constructivism. Diagonal composition, close-ups
and innovative positioning of the camera are used
by the photographer in total harmony with the
immanent logic of Modernism. Penson sincerely shares its
enthusiasm for reshaping society, at least
he appears to be until the mid-1930s.
Among the many Soviet myths one of the most important
was associated with sports and the militarization of the
country, which were closely connected with one another.
Athletic subjects were popular with all Soviet Modernist
photographers, and Penson was no exception. They gave the
opportunity, on the one hand, to avoid staged
photo-report, which became the principle genre
as early as the mid-1920s, and, on the other,
it hypnotized the viewer, like in the case
of any totalitarian regime, with the colossal energy
of collective will.
As the totalitarian system in the USSR gained
strength, the authorities began imposing Socialist Realism
everywhere, most of all, on photography. Censorship
and self-censorship started influencing the works
of all Soviet artists without exception, including Max
Penson. In photographs like “In the Meeting Hall
of the Central Executive Committee of Uzbekistan”
(1935) or “On the Veranda of the Sanatorium
in Shakhimardan” (1932) he is clearly
preoccupied with the problem of light — real,
physical light, and metaphysical light illuminating new life.
But in “Mother and Child Sanatorium in Bukhara”
(1935) we see a different picture — the author
is painstakingly trying to visualize alien
ideological principles of Socialist Realism. Uzbek women
with babies, in the midst of a splendid spring
garden, are portrayed at the foot
of an enormous monument to Lenin and Stalin,
sitting side by side. It is interesting
to note that this sculpture, reproduced in millions
of copies across the enormous territory of the
Soviet Union, was inspired by a photograph, which
in turn was created with the help of retouch and
montage, and in fact it was the only photograph
of this type that was allowed to be reprinted
in all the text-books on Soviet
history. The images of Lenin in a wheelchair,
photographed at the end of his life, when
he was in reality a prisoner in his Gorki
residence, and of Stalin, resting in a wicker
chair, were expected to symbolize the continuity
of Soviet power, canonizing the friendship of the
Bolshevik chiefs, when Lenin’s myth was needed to support
and enforce Stalin’s cult.
The picture of the Uzbek mothers, who, without
yashmaks, are feeding babies at the foot of the
monument to the two political chiefs, was meant
to become a symbol of the liberation
of Eastern women from the age-old religious
and social oppression. The representation of these global
symbols, combined with an attempt to use
a compositional scheme typical for classical art, leads
to such deplorable results, that we can hardly
believe that this shot was made by Max Penson at the
peak of his artistic career. This photograph
is symbolic in itself as an example
of the painful forced birth of Socialist Realism
aesthetic.
Max Penson’s son Miron, himself an outstanding
cinematographer and photographer, remembered how in those
years his father would light nightly fires in his garden,
throwing into the flames the negatives and prints
of those men and women, who were crossed out of life
by Stalin’s regime. Alas, this precautionary measure was
not enough. After the war the Soviet authorities launched
a campaign against cosmopolitism, and finally the new
anti-Semitic wave reached Uzbekistan.
In 1949 Max Penson’s photographic license was
withdrawn and he was fired from the newspaper where
he had worked for more than twenty years.
During the last ten years of his life, until
1959, Penson, very depressed and seriously ill,
was engaged in retouching his photographs. This
is how a new variant of the subject “Propaganda
Cart in the Collective Farm Named after Molotov”
appeared. On the one hand, this retouching, affecting
a large part of his archive, was something absurd,
because it was applied to those shots which were
printed in the 1930s and which would
no longer be accepted by the Soviet press
of the two subsequent decades. On the other hand,
it strangely reminds one of the drawings
of Ilia Kabakov, the master of Soviet underground
art and one of the creators of the
so-called “sots-art” aesthetic, famous for his
ironical treatment of Soviet myths. Censorship and
self-censorship taught the Soviet people
to keep silent. Max Penson also kept silent, even when
he was alone with his family. But this odd drawing over
his own prints, that transformation of serene, spiritual
personages into pasteboard monsters was, it seems,
a form of defense reaction, the only way
to reflect on the tragic experience of his
collapsing hopes and beliefs. These beliefs, which nourished
his work in the 1920s and
1930s, existed only for the period of time
when Russian Modernism found inspiration in the new
ideological slogans of the Bolsheviks, the latter
launching their own process of modernization. For them
Uzbekistan was a sort of a testing area, where
“innovative“ measures of the Soviet regime were
particularly radical, leading to visibly “outstanding”
results.
For several decades the oeuvre of Max Penson vanished
from the history of Soviet photography, just like the
first leaders of the Soviet Regime, later labeled
„enemies of the people”, whose portraits he burned,
disappeared from history books.
In 1966 Max Penson’s archive was buried under
the remains of a building destroyed
by a terrible earth-quake. The whole
of Tashkent was lying in ruins. The archive was
saved owing to the heroic efforts of Dina and
Faizulla Khodzhaev, the photographer’s daughter and her
husband. In 1996 Max Penson’s works were shown
in Switzerland, and in 1997 the Museum “Moscow
House of Photography” organized another exhibition
in the Paris Gallery «Carré Noir». Since then Penson’s
works are often shown in Russia and Uzbekistan,
as well as in various American and European
museums and galleries.
The exhibition «Modernism: the New World Designed.
1914—1939» at the Victoria and Albert Museum
in London includes the works of two Soviet
photographers — Alexander Rodchenko and Max Penson. They
never met each other personally, but their meeting in the
history of Russian photography seems quite appropriate.
Olga Sviblova, Director
of the Museum “Moscow House
of Photography”