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American National Exhibition

The American National Exhibition, held from July 25 to September 4, 1959, was an exhibition of American art, fashion, cars, capitalism, model homes and futuristic kitchens. Held at Sokolniki Park in Moscow, then capital of the Soviet Union, the exhibition attracted 3 million visitors during its six-week run.[1][2][3] The Cold War event is historic for the "Kitchen Debate" between then-Vice President of the United States Richard Nixon and Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev, held first at the model kitchen table, outfitted by General Electric, and then continued in the color television studio where it was broadcast to both countries, with each leader arguing the merits of his system,[4] and a conversation that "escalated from washing machines to nuclear warfare."[5]

American National Exhibition
Richard Nixon and Nikita Khrushchev at the American National Exhibition, July 1959
DateJuly 25 to Sept. 4, 1959
DurationSix weeks
VenueSokolniki Park
LocationMoscow, Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR)
Motivediplomacy, capitalism, ideology
Budget$3.6 million
ParticipantsKey figures in mid-century American art and design including artists Jack Levine, Isamu Noguchi, Hyman Bloom, Jackson Pollock, Edward Hopper and designers Charles and Ray Eames, Buckminster Fuller and Herman Miller.

But the event is equally renowned for its art exhibition, which included such celebrated artists as sculptors Robert Laurent, Ibram Lassaw and Isamu Noguchi and painters Hyman Bloom, Jackson Pollock and Edward Hopper in an art show coordinated by the United States Information Agency (USIA). Prior to the exhibition, the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) threatened to remove many of the artists who had been accused of links to communist activities. After President Dwight D. Eisenhower intervened, however, the exhibition went on as planned.[6]

Interpretations of the event are mixed. Some called the event a success because it humanized both countries, leading to better relations between them.[7] Some also note that the event resulted in "a landmark contract to mass-manufacture Pepsi in the Soviet Union," creating new business opportunity, as well as a better relationship. But others argue that "[a] year later, the Cuban missile crisis brought both sides to the brink of nuclear war, and ties didn't begin improving until the 1970s."[7] Meanwhile, liberal critics characterized the exhibition as an American Cold War "propaganda strategy."[8]

History Edit

Political Edit

The exhibit was sponsored by the American government, and "a similar exhibition was mounted by the Soviet Union at the Coliseum in New York City."[3] Essentially organized as a cultural exchange, there were as many goals as there were interpretations of the event. Nixon, for example, used it as an occasion to increase his stature as an American leader and showcase American consumer goods.

The then Vice President had embarked "on a ten-day tour of the Soviet Union that coincided with the exhibition in Moscow, and on the opening day, he and Khrushchev toured the exhibits together before the gates opened to the public."[9] Using a videotape recorder, "one of the first to allow a live program to be easily recorded and quickly broadcasted on television,"[10] the two leaders stopped in one of four model U.S. kitchens, with each arguing the merits of his own system:

In the upcoming presidential election, Nixon would cite the Kitchen Debate as an example of his fierce diplomacy. Ironically, the Kitchen Debate likely gave Nixon overconfidence in his televised debating skill. Just over a year later, Nixon agreed to debate a young John F. Kennedy and was humiliated in the first televised presidential debate.[10]

Race-related Edit

"Even more so than art and fashion, it was the on-the-ground guides that would" serve to personalize America's presence in Moscow, answering questions and engaging in polite debate with Soviet visitors." The group included 27 women and 48 men," all purposefully younger than 35 to reflect America's youth. "All guides were fluent in Russian and some were (almost certainly) trained in intelligence gathering."[1] Four of them were also black, and "President Eisenhower was apparently concerned with how they might represent the United States and its systemic violations of civil rights in 1959." So when he invited the guides to the White House for a meet-and-greet ahead of the exhibition, he "quizzed the black guides about how they came to be fluent in Russian."[1] In the end, their answers reassured him that they wouldn't give the Soviets reason to rebut America's emphasis on freedom with a discussion of inequality in America, and so they were sent to Moscow as originally planned.[1]

"One of the more popular exhibits ... was the IBM RAMAC 305 computer. It could answer over 4,000 questions within a wide range of topics—some of them quite uncomfortable for Americans to address. Not only were common questions like "What is the price of American cigarettes?" and "What is jazz music?" answered with a printout in just 90 seconds, thornier questions about race relations and lynching were also pre-programmed to give diplomatic responses.[11]

Commercial Edit

Meanwhile, the exhibition itself was a showcase for the latest "home appliances, fashions, television and hi-fi sets, a model house priced to sell [to] an 'average' family, farm equipment, 1959 automobiles, boats, sporting equipment and a children's playground,[12] as well as books and vinyl records."[13] Overall, the various displays of the exhibit, which involved the designer George Nelson, showcased approximately "3,000 tons of material ... sent from the US to Moscow." Visitors could see everything from canned foods, tractors, and vinyl records to furniture and fittings, such as Herman Miller Bubble lamps; as well as a multiscreen film, Glimpses of the U.S.A. by fellow Herman Miller designers, Charles and Ray Eames.[14][15] There were also "four demonstration kitchens ... with the RCA/Whirlpool Miracle Kitchen [being] the most futuristic."[16] "It promised super-fast meal preparation, push-button everything, and automatic robot cleaners."[16] Overall, "[a]bout 450 companies made contributions to the Moscow exhibition. Sears, IBM, General Mills, Kodak, Whirlpool, Macy's, Pepsi, General Motors, RCA, and Dixie Cup all had a presence, despite the fact that none of their products could be purchased in the Soviet Union."[16]

"The Americans showed off a lot of consumer goods because—unlike heavy industry and space exploration—products like dishwashers and soda pop were areas where the U.S. was way ahead of Communist Russia. Largely unimpressed, Soviet leaders claimed that it was merely a bunch of gadgets. And in some ways they were right": Many of them weren't in American homes yet.[17]

Pepsi Edit

"Coca-Cola [had] declined to participate in the Exhibition, but Pepsi dove in with both feet."[18] "This no doubt greased the wheels for Pepsi's entrance into the Soviet Union in 1972, after Nixon's re-election. Detente was succeeding in the early 1970s and there was a kind of swap: Pepsi would be introduced to the Soviet Union if Russian vodka could enter the American market....[T]he two countries signed a 10-year countertrade agreement, allowing Stolichnaya vodka in the U.S. and Pepsi into the USSR."[18]

Splitnik Edit

In 1959, the vice president of the Housing and Home Components department at Loewy/Snaith, Andrew Geller was the design supervisor for the exhibition, the "Typical American House," built at the American National Exhibition. The exhibition home largely replicated a home previously built at 398 Townline Road[19] in Commack, New York, which had been originally designed by Stanley H. Klein for the Long Island-based firm All-State Properties, headed by developer Herbert Sadkin.[20][21] To accommodate visitors to the exhibition, Sadkin hired Loewy's office to modify Klein's floor plan.[19] According to one version of how the house got its name, Geller supervised the work, which "split" the house, creating its nickname "Splitnik," and a way for large numbers of visitors to tour the small house.[19] In another version, it's said that [t]he Russians called the house the “Splitnik,” [as] a pun on “Sputnik,” the name of the satellite the Soviets had put into orbit two years before."[22] Either way, subsequently, the Vice President Richard Nixon and Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev began what became known as the Kitchen Debate on July 24, 1959, arguing the merits of capitalism vs. socialism, with Khrushchev saying Americans could not afford the luxury represented by the "Typical American House."[23] The Soviet news agency Tass buttressed Khrushchev's opinion, writing:

There is no more truth in showing this as the typical home of the American worker than, say, in showing the Taj Mahal as the typical home of a Bombay textile worker.[19]

Ideological Edit

The "exhibition was also a tool of cultural diplomacy against the Soviet Communist Regime"[3] as the American politicians wanted to demonstrate the advantages of capitalism to the Soviets. This is evident in Vice President Richard Nixon's speech on the opening night of the Exhibition on July 24, 1959, as he congratulated USSR's Premier Nikita Khrushchev and the Soviets on their advances in astronomy and rocket science, but quickly returned to focus on the United States' strong points, especially the concept of freedom.[24]

Art controversies Edit

 
By 1949, Michigan Representative George Dondero was already denouncing NCASF as communist.
 
In 1957, Rockwell Kent had the first American solo exhibition in the Soviet Union.
 
In 1959, Francis E. Walter, the HUAC Chair, found links between half the artists and communism.

The National Council of American Soviet Friendship Edit

The National American Exhibition was not the first American attempt at using the visual arts for cultural diplomacy. In 1943, an outgrowth of the "Soviet friendship societies established in the US during the 1920s and 1930s,"inspired many American artists and intellectuals to travel on cultural exchanges at government expense.[25] That led to the development of the National Council of American Soviet Friendship, which emphasized both visual arts and partnerships with American museums, and found an enthusiastic audience of American artists. Many of them had been employed by the Federal Art Project where they had also worked in the social realist tradition. That history echoed the Soviets' state funding and penchant for heroic imagery.[25]

The rise of nonrepresentational art Edit

By 1949, however, "artists associated with the group were targeted by antimodernist campaigns led by U.S. Representative George A. Dondero ... who denounced the NCASF as “Communist and subversive,”[26] and characterized socially engaged artists as “soldiers of the revolution—in smocks.”[26] These opinions later won him the International Fine Arts Council's Gold Medal of Honor for "dedicated service to American Art."[27] Meanwhile, an art establishment that had been supportive of American social realism began to back away from anything resembling political engagement, and began "favor[ing] nonrepresentational work that they viewed as apolitical and individualistic."[25]

The first American artist Edit

 
Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy, photographed in 1954, asked Rockwell Kent whether he was a communist. HUAC later investigated the other 67 artists invited to exhibit their work in the American National Exhibition.

Relations between the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. began to thaw again in the 1950s, even while red-baiting continued to dominate the American discourse. In 1953, the artist Rockwell Kent, a former member of the Socialist Party of America and a one-time Congressional candidate for the American Labor Party, was questioned by Joseph R. McCarthy.[28] He and William Gropper were the only two visual artists ever called before the Senate Permanent Subcommittee of Investigations on Government Operations.[29] Like Gropper, Kent refused to confirm or deny his political status on Fifth Amendment grounds.[28]

In 1957, Kent became NCASF chairman, as well as "the first postwar American artist to be granted a solo exhibition in the Soviet Union."[25] The Soviets promoted him, even while many American government officials remained suspicious: "The opening reception at the Pushkin Museum on December 12 was attended by prominent figures from the Moscow art community and representatives of the U.S. Embassy," but Kent was not given a passport to attend the opening.[25] Yet the American show in the U.S.S.R. attracted attention, traveling first to the State Hermitage Museum ... before continuing on to ... Kiev, Riga, and Odessa, attracting a reported half-million visitors.[25]

A plurality of American artists Edit

Two years later, the U.S. State Department’s Advisory Committee on the Arts and the U.S. Information Agency’s (USIA) Advisory Committee on Cultural Information, which co-managed the American National Exhibition, launched an art show of their own, in many ways reminiscent of Kent's.[25] Although art historians tend to focus on the abstract artists included in the show, the show's jury "made a concerted effort to emphasize the plurality of U.S. art," to illustrate a diversity of expression as a benefit of American democracy.[25] Thus, the exhibits included American Scene paintings by [Thomas Hart] Benton, John Steuart Curry, Edward Hopper, and Grant Wood; expressionism and early experiments with abstraction by [Yasuo] Kuniyoshi, [Max] Weber, and Stuart Davis; and mature abstraction by Alexander Calder, Jackson Pollock, and Mark Rothko...."[25] Like Kent, however, the artists invited to appear in the Exhibition were linked to communist activities, and "a few right-wing publicists and legislators" accused them of "undermining the reputation of the United States."[25][30]

Eisenhower appeases HUAC Edit

After the entire group of painters and sculptors were investigated, Francis Walter, Chairman of the House Committee on Un-American Activities (HUAC), revealed that thirty-four of the sixty-seven featured artists had been involved in some Communist organization.[31] The Committee was prepared to remove their work from the Exhibit altogether when President Eisenhower intervened and allowed them to be displayed as originally planned. To appease the conservatives, however, he also added several paintings dating back to the eighteenth century, to further lessen the impact of the more avant-garde work.[32]

Legacy Edit

 
Former President Obama met with then-President Dmitry Medvedev on July 7, 2009, during the 50th Anniversary of the American National Exhibition.

The American National Exhibition became the first of a series of traveling exhibitions from the U.S. Embassy in Moscow that continued for the next five decades to the early 1990s.[33] In total, there were 87 separate showings of 19 exhibitions in 25 different cities, across 12 time zones, exhibiting American technology, from graphic arts to agriculture, outdoor recreation to medicine.[33][34] The 50th anniversary conference of the National American Exhibition was celebrated "a day after U.S. President Barack Obama was in Russia to try to kick-start relations. With ties between Washington and Moscow at Cold War lows again, there was heavy nostalgia for the heady days of detente."[35]

Notes Edit

  1. ^ a b c d Novak, Matt (July 24, 2014). "The All-American Expo That Invaded Cold War Russia". Gizmodo.
  2. ^ "Sokolniki Exhibition and Convention Center". Sokolniki Exhibition and Convention Center. from the original on 2014-08-24.
  3. ^ a b c Kushner, Marilyn S., Winter 2002. "Exhibiting Art at the American National Exhibition in Moscow, 1959: Domestic Politics and Cultural Diplomacy". Journal of Cold War Studies. 4 no. 1: 6.
  4. ^ Feifer, Gregory (2 February 2012). "Fifty Years Ago, American Exhibition Stunned Soviets". Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. Retrieved 2020-07-15.
  5. ^ csnara789 (2012-07-26). "If You Can't Take the Heat…". The Unwritten Record. Retrieved 2020-07-15.
  6. ^ Schwartz, Lowell H. (2009), "Cultural Infiltration: A New Propaganda Strategy for a New Era of Soviet—West Relations", Political Warfare against the Kremlin, London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, pp. 181–208, doi:10.1057/9780230236936_8, ISBN 978-1-349-30666-4
  7. ^ a b Feifer, Gregory (2 February 2012). "Fifty Years Ago, American Exhibition Stunned Soviets". Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. Retrieved 2020-07-15.
  8. ^ Schwartz, Lowell H. (2009), "Cultural Infiltration: A New Propaganda Strategy for a New Era of Soviet—West Relations", Political Warfare against the Kremlin, London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, pp. 181–208, doi:10.1057/9780230236936_8, ISBN 978-1-349-30666-4
  9. ^ Department Of State. The Office of Electronic Information, Bureau of Public Affairs (2008-07-18). "Cultural Competition/Cultural Cooperation: U.S. Trade and Cultural Fair in Moscow and the Kitchen Debate, 1959". 2001-2009.state.gov. Retrieved 2020-07-24.
  10. ^ a b csnara789 (2012-07-26). "If You Can't Take the Heat…". The Unwritten Record. Retrieved 2020-07-15.
  11. ^ "The All-American Expo That Invaded Cold War Russia". Paleofuture. 24 July 2014. Retrieved 2020-07-15.
  12. ^ "The Russian People Can Take a Peek at U.S. Civilization." Saturday Evening Post, August 1, 1959.
  13. ^ Masey, Jack (2008). Cold War confrontations : US exhibitions and their role in the cultural Cold War. Morgan, Conway Lloyd. Baden, Switzerland: Lars Müller. ISBN 978-3037781234. OCLC 276567543.
  14. ^ "Culture – the Work of Charles and Ray Eames: A Legacy of Invention | Exhibitions – Library of Congress". Library of Congress. 20 May 1999.
  15. ^ "When Herman Miller took on the USSR | Design | Agenda". Phaidon. Retrieved 2020-07-15.
  16. ^ a b c "The All-American Expo That Invaded Cold War Russia". Paleofuture. 24 July 2014. Retrieved 2020-07-15.
  17. ^ "The All-American Expo That Invaded Cold War Russia". Paleofuture. 24 July 2014. Retrieved 2020-07-15.
  18. ^ a b "The All-American Expo That Invaded Cold War Russia". Paleofuture. 24 July 2014. Retrieved 2020-07-15.
  19. ^ a b c d "The Kitchen Debate's Actual Kitchen". New York Magazine, Justin Davidson, May 8, 2011.
  20. ^ Paquette, Carole (6 April 2003). "Macy's Montauk Houses, a Cold War Footnote". The New York Times.
  21. ^ "Herbert Sadkin, 72, Former L.I. Developer". The New York Times. 18 February 1989.
  22. ^ norway, architecture. "architecture norway |". www.architecturenorway.no. Retrieved 2020-07-15.
  23. ^ Geller, Andrew; Kahn, Eve M. (5 May 2011). "In Search of Fun Among the Dunes". The New York Times.
  24. ^ Nixon, Richard. Speech: "What Freedom Means to Us", July 24, 1959.
  25. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Bailey, Julia Tatiana (2017-03-01). "The National Council of American-Soviet Friendship and Art in the Shadow of the Cold War". Archives of American Art Journal. 56 (1): 42–65. doi:10.1086/692635. ISSN 0003-9853. S2CID 194392445.
  26. ^ a b Dondero, “Communist Art in Government Hospitals,” Cong. Rec., 81st Cong., 1st sess., March 11, 1949, vol. 95: 2364–65; and Dondero, “Communists Maneuver to Control Art in the United States,” Cong. Rec., 81st Cong., 1st sess., March 25, 1949, vol. 95: 3297–98.
  27. ^ "Anticommunism and Modern Art". www.writing.upenn.edu. Retrieved 2020-07-24.
  28. ^ a b Whitman, Alden (1971-03-14). "Man of Multiple Skills". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2020-07-27.
  29. ^ "Blacklisted: William Gropper's Capriccios : Art in Print". artinprint.org. Retrieved 2020-07-28.
  30. ^ Kushner, Marilyn S. Winter 2002. Exhibiting Art at the American National Exhibition in Moscow, 1959: Domestic Politics and Cultural Diplomacy. Journal of Cold War Studies. 4 no. 1: 7.
  31. ^ Kushner, Marilyn S. Winter 2002. Exhibiting Art at the American National Exhibition in Moscow, 1959: Domestic Politics and Cultural Diplomacy. Journal of Cold War Studies. 4 no. 1: 10.
  32. ^ Kushner, Marilyn S. Winter 2002. Exhibiting Art at the American National Exhibition in Moscow, 1959: Domestic Politics and Cultural Diplomacy. Journal of Cold War Studies. 4 no. 1: 17.
  33. ^ a b United States Department of State
  34. ^ "50th Anniversary of the American Exhibits to the U.S.S.R." United States Department of State. Retrieved July 24, 2020.
  35. ^ Feifer, Gregory (2 February 2012). "Fifty Years Ago, American Exhibition Stunned Soviets". RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty. Retrieved July 15, 2020.

References Edit

  • Hearings before the Committee on Un-American Activities, House of Representatives (1959). The American National Exhibition, Moscow, July 1959. Retrieved 6 February 2011.
  • Kushner, M. S. (2002). "Exhibiting Art at the American National Exhibition in Moscow, 1959: Domestic Politics and Cultural Diplomacy". Journal of Cold War Studies. 4: 6–26. doi:10.1162/152039702753344807. S2CID 57560840.

american, national, exhibition, held, from, july, september, 1959, exhibition, american, fashion, cars, capitalism, model, homes, futuristic, kitchens, held, sokolniki, park, moscow, then, capital, soviet, union, exhibition, attracted, million, visitors, durin. The American National Exhibition held from July 25 to September 4 1959 was an exhibition of American art fashion cars capitalism model homes and futuristic kitchens Held at Sokolniki Park in Moscow then capital of the Soviet Union the exhibition attracted 3 million visitors during its six week run 1 2 3 The Cold War event is historic for the Kitchen Debate between then Vice President of the United States Richard Nixon and Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev held first at the model kitchen table outfitted by General Electric and then continued in the color television studio where it was broadcast to both countries with each leader arguing the merits of his system 4 and a conversation that escalated from washing machines to nuclear warfare 5 American National ExhibitionRichard Nixon and Nikita Khrushchev at the American National Exhibition July 1959DateJuly 25 to Sept 4 1959DurationSix weeksVenueSokolniki ParkLocationMoscow Union of Soviet Socialist Republics USSR Motivediplomacy capitalism ideologyBudget 3 6 millionParticipantsKey figures in mid century American art and design including artists Jack Levine Isamu Noguchi Hyman Bloom Jackson Pollock Edward Hopper and designers Charles and Ray Eames Buckminster Fuller and Herman Miller But the event is equally renowned for its art exhibition which included such celebrated artists as sculptors Robert Laurent Ibram Lassaw and Isamu Noguchi and painters Hyman Bloom Jackson Pollock and Edward Hopper in an art show coordinated by the United States Information Agency USIA Prior to the exhibition the House Un American Activities Committee HUAC threatened to remove many of the artists who had been accused of links to communist activities After President Dwight D Eisenhower intervened however the exhibition went on as planned 6 Interpretations of the event are mixed Some called the event a success because it humanized both countries leading to better relations between them 7 Some also note that the event resulted in a landmark contract to mass manufacture Pepsi in the Soviet Union creating new business opportunity as well as a better relationship But others argue that a year later the Cuban missile crisis brought both sides to the brink of nuclear war and ties didn t begin improving until the 1970s 7 Meanwhile liberal critics characterized the exhibition as an American Cold War propaganda strategy 8 Contents 1 History 1 1 Political 1 2 Race related 1 3 Commercial 1 3 1 Pepsi 1 3 2 Splitnik 1 4 Ideological 2 Art controversies 2 1 The National Council of American Soviet Friendship 2 2 The rise of nonrepresentational art 2 3 The first American artist 2 4 A plurality of American artists 2 5 Eisenhower appeases HUAC 3 Legacy 4 Notes 5 ReferencesHistory EditPolitical Edit See also Kitchen Debate The exhibit was sponsored by the American government and a similar exhibition was mounted by the Soviet Union at the Coliseum in New York City 3 Essentially organized as a cultural exchange there were as many goals as there were interpretations of the event Nixon for example used it as an occasion to increase his stature as an American leader and showcase American consumer goods The then Vice President had embarked on a ten day tour of the Soviet Union that coincided with the exhibition in Moscow and on the opening day he and Khrushchev toured the exhibits together before the gates opened to the public 9 Using a videotape recorder one of the first to allow a live program to be easily recorded and quickly broadcasted on television 10 the two leaders stopped in one of four model U S kitchens with each arguing the merits of his own system In the upcoming presidential election Nixon would cite the Kitchen Debate as an example of his fierce diplomacy Ironically the Kitchen Debate likely gave Nixon overconfidence in his televised debating skill Just over a year later Nixon agreed to debate a young John F Kennedy and was humiliated in the first televised presidential debate 10 Race related Edit See also And you are lynching Negroes Even more so than art and fashion it was the on the ground guides that would serve to personalize America s presence in Moscow answering questions and engaging in polite debate with Soviet visitors The group included 27 women and 48 men all purposefully younger than 35 to reflect America s youth All guides were fluent in Russian and some were almost certainly trained in intelligence gathering 1 Four of them were also black and President Eisenhower was apparently concerned with how they might represent the United States and its systemic violations of civil rights in 1959 So when he invited the guides to the White House for a meet and greet ahead of the exhibition he quizzed the black guides about how they came to be fluent in Russian 1 In the end their answers reassured him that they wouldn t give the Soviets reason to rebut America s emphasis on freedom with a discussion of inequality in America and so they were sent to Moscow as originally planned 1 One of the more popular exhibits was the IBM RAMAC 305 computer It could answer over 4 000 questions within a wide range of topics some of them quite uncomfortable for Americans to address Not only were common questions like What is the price of American cigarettes and What is jazz music answered with a printout in just 90 seconds thornier questions about race relations and lynching were also pre programmed to give diplomatic responses 11 Commercial Edit See also Consumerism and Consumer capitalism Meanwhile the exhibition itself was a showcase for the latest home appliances fashions television and hi fi sets a model house priced to sell to an average family farm equipment 1959 automobiles boats sporting equipment and a children s playground 12 as well as books and vinyl records 13 Overall the various displays of the exhibit which involved the designer George Nelson showcased approximately 3 000 tons of material sent from the US to Moscow Visitors could see everything from canned foods tractors and vinyl records to furniture and fittings such as Herman Miller Bubble lamps as well as a multiscreen film Glimpses of the U S A by fellow Herman Miller designers Charles and Ray Eames 14 15 There were also four demonstration kitchens with the RCA Whirlpool Miracle Kitchen being the most futuristic 16 It promised super fast meal preparation push button everything and automatic robot cleaners 16 Overall a bout 450 companies made contributions to the Moscow exhibition Sears IBM General Mills Kodak Whirlpool Macy s Pepsi General Motors RCA and Dixie Cup all had a presence despite the fact that none of their products could be purchased in the Soviet Union 16 The Americans showed off a lot of consumer goods because unlike heavy industry and space exploration products like dishwashers and soda pop were areas where the U S was way ahead of Communist Russia Largely unimpressed Soviet leaders claimed that it was merely a bunch of gadgets And in some ways they were right Many of them weren t in American homes yet 17 Pepsi Edit Coca Cola had declined to participate in the Exhibition but Pepsi dove in with both feet 18 This no doubt greased the wheels for Pepsi s entrance into the Soviet Union in 1972 after Nixon s re election Detente was succeeding in the early 1970s and there was a kind of swap Pepsi would be introduced to the Soviet Union if Russian vodka could enter the American market T he two countries signed a 10 year countertrade agreement allowing Stolichnaya vodka in the U S and Pepsi into the USSR 18 Splitnik Edit See also Leisurama houseIn 1959 the vice president of the Housing and Home Components department at Loewy Snaith Andrew Geller was the design supervisor for the exhibition the Typical American House built at the American National Exhibition The exhibition home largely replicated a home previously built at 398 Townline Road 19 in Commack New York which had been originally designed by Stanley H Klein for the Long Island based firm All State Properties headed by developer Herbert Sadkin 20 21 To accommodate visitors to the exhibition Sadkin hired Loewy s office to modify Klein s floor plan 19 According to one version of how the house got its name Geller supervised the work which split the house creating its nickname Splitnik and a way for large numbers of visitors to tour the small house 19 In another version it s said that t he Russians called the house the Splitnik as a pun on Sputnik the name of the satellite the Soviets had put into orbit two years before 22 Either way subsequently the Vice President Richard Nixon and Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev began what became known as the Kitchen Debate on July 24 1959 arguing the merits of capitalism vs socialism with Khrushchev saying Americans could not afford the luxury represented by the Typical American House 23 The Soviet news agency Tass buttressed Khrushchev s opinion writing There is no more truth in showing this as the typical home of the American worker than say in showing the Taj Mahal as the typical home of a Bombay textile worker 19 Ideological Edit See also Propaganda in the United States The exhibition was also a tool of cultural diplomacy against the Soviet Communist Regime 3 as the American politicians wanted to demonstrate the advantages of capitalism to the Soviets This is evident in Vice President Richard Nixon s speech on the opening night of the Exhibition on July 24 1959 as he congratulated USSR s Premier Nikita Khrushchev and the Soviets on their advances in astronomy and rocket science but quickly returned to focus on the United States strong points especially the concept of freedom 24 Art controversies EditSee also McCarthyism and Red baiting nbsp By 1949 Michigan Representative George Dondero was already denouncing NCASF as communist nbsp In 1957 Rockwell Kent had the first American solo exhibition in the Soviet Union nbsp In 1959 Francis E Walter the HUAC Chair found links between half the artists and communism The National Council of American Soviet Friendship Edit The National American Exhibition was not the first American attempt at using the visual arts for cultural diplomacy In 1943 an outgrowth of the Soviet friendship societies established in the US during the 1920s and 1930s inspired many American artists and intellectuals to travel on cultural exchanges at government expense 25 That led to the development of the National Council of American Soviet Friendship which emphasized both visual arts and partnerships with American museums and found an enthusiastic audience of American artists Many of them had been employed by the Federal Art Project where they had also worked in the social realist tradition That history echoed the Soviets state funding and penchant for heroic imagery 25 The rise of nonrepresentational art Edit By 1949 however artists associated with the group were targeted by antimodernist campaigns led by U S Representative George A Dondero who denounced the NCASF as Communist and subversive 26 and characterized socially engaged artists as soldiers of the revolution in smocks 26 These opinions later won him the International Fine Arts Council s Gold Medal of Honor for dedicated service to American Art 27 Meanwhile an art establishment that had been supportive of American social realism began to back away from anything resembling political engagement and began favor ing nonrepresentational work that they viewed as apolitical and individualistic 25 The first American artist Edit nbsp Sen Joseph R McCarthy photographed in 1954 asked Rockwell Kent whether he was a communist HUAC later investigated the other 67 artists invited to exhibit their work in the American National Exhibition Relations between the U S and the U S S R began to thaw again in the 1950s even while red baiting continued to dominate the American discourse In 1953 the artist Rockwell Kent a former member of the Socialist Party of America and a one time Congressional candidate for the American Labor Party was questioned by Joseph R McCarthy 28 He and William Gropper were the only two visual artists ever called before the Senate Permanent Subcommittee of Investigations on Government Operations 29 Like Gropper Kent refused to confirm or deny his political status on Fifth Amendment grounds 28 In 1957 Kent became NCASF chairman as well as the first postwar American artist to be granted a solo exhibition in the Soviet Union 25 The Soviets promoted him even while many American government officials remained suspicious The opening reception at the Pushkin Museum on December 12 was attended by prominent figures from the Moscow art community and representatives of the U S Embassy but Kent was not given a passport to attend the opening 25 Yet the American show in the U S S R attracted attention traveling first to the State Hermitage Museum before continuing on to Kiev Riga and Odessa attracting a reported half million visitors 25 A plurality of American artists Edit Two years later the U S State Department s Advisory Committee on the Arts and the U S Information Agency s USIA Advisory Committee on Cultural Information which co managed the American National Exhibition launched an art show of their own in many ways reminiscent of Kent s 25 Although art historians tend to focus on the abstract artists included in the show the show s jury made a concerted effort to emphasize the plurality of U S art to illustrate a diversity of expression as a benefit of American democracy 25 Thus the exhibits included American Scene paintings by Thomas Hart Benton John Steuart Curry Edward Hopper and Grant Wood expressionism and early experiments with abstraction by Yasuo Kuniyoshi Max Weber and Stuart Davis and mature abstraction by Alexander Calder Jackson Pollock and Mark Rothko 25 Like Kent however the artists invited to appear in the Exhibition were linked to communist activities and a few right wing publicists and legislators accused them of undermining the reputation of the United States 25 30 Eisenhower appeases HUAC Edit After the entire group of painters and sculptors were investigated Francis Walter Chairman of the House Committee on Un American Activities HUAC revealed that thirty four of the sixty seven featured artists had been involved in some Communist organization 31 The Committee was prepared to remove their work from the Exhibit altogether when President Eisenhower intervened and allowed them to be displayed as originally planned To appease the conservatives however he also added several paintings dating back to the eighteenth century to further lessen the impact of the more avant garde work 32 Legacy Edit nbsp Former President Obama met with then President Dmitry Medvedev on July 7 2009 during the 50th Anniversary of the American National Exhibition The American National Exhibition became the first of a series of traveling exhibitions from the U S Embassy in Moscow that continued for the next five decades to the early 1990s 33 In total there were 87 separate showings of 19 exhibitions in 25 different cities across 12 time zones exhibiting American technology from graphic arts to agriculture outdoor recreation to medicine 33 34 The 50th anniversary conference of the National American Exhibition was celebrated a day after U S President Barack Obama was in Russia to try to kick start relations With ties between Washington and Moscow at Cold War lows again there was heavy nostalgia for the heady days of detente 35 Notes Edit a b c d Novak Matt July 24 2014 The All American Expo That Invaded Cold War Russia Gizmodo Sokolniki Exhibition and Convention Center Sokolniki Exhibition and Convention Center Archived from the original on 2014 08 24 a b c Kushner Marilyn S Winter 2002 Exhibiting Art at the American National Exhibition in Moscow 1959 Domestic Politics and Cultural Diplomacy Journal of Cold War Studies 4 no 1 6 Feifer Gregory 2 February 2012 Fifty Years Ago American Exhibition Stunned Soviets Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty Retrieved 2020 07 15 csnara789 2012 07 26 If You Can t Take the Heat The Unwritten Record Retrieved 2020 07 15 Schwartz Lowell H 2009 Cultural Infiltration A New Propaganda Strategy for a New Era of Soviet West Relations Political Warfare against the Kremlin London Palgrave Macmillan UK pp 181 208 doi 10 1057 9780230236936 8 ISBN 978 1 349 30666 4 a b Feifer Gregory 2 February 2012 Fifty Years Ago American Exhibition Stunned Soviets Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty Retrieved 2020 07 15 Schwartz Lowell H 2009 Cultural Infiltration A New Propaganda Strategy for a New Era of Soviet West Relations Political Warfare against the Kremlin London Palgrave Macmillan UK pp 181 208 doi 10 1057 9780230236936 8 ISBN 978 1 349 30666 4 Department Of State The Office of Electronic Information Bureau of Public Affairs 2008 07 18 Cultural Competition Cultural Cooperation U S Trade and Cultural Fair in Moscow and the Kitchen Debate 1959 2001 2009 state gov Retrieved 2020 07 24 a b csnara789 2012 07 26 If You Can t Take the Heat The Unwritten Record Retrieved 2020 07 15 The All American Expo That Invaded Cold War Russia Paleofuture 24 July 2014 Retrieved 2020 07 15 The Russian People Can Take a Peek at U S Civilization Saturday Evening Post August 1 1959 Masey Jack 2008 Cold War confrontations US exhibitions and their role in the cultural Cold War Morgan Conway Lloyd Baden Switzerland Lars Muller ISBN 978 3037781234 OCLC 276567543 Culture the Work of Charles and Ray Eames A Legacy of Invention Exhibitions Library of Congress Library of Congress 20 May 1999 When Herman Miller took on the USSR Design Agenda Phaidon Retrieved 2020 07 15 a b c The All American Expo That Invaded Cold War Russia Paleofuture 24 July 2014 Retrieved 2020 07 15 The All American Expo That Invaded Cold War Russia Paleofuture 24 July 2014 Retrieved 2020 07 15 a b The All American Expo That Invaded Cold War Russia Paleofuture 24 July 2014 Retrieved 2020 07 15 a b c d The Kitchen Debate s Actual Kitchen New York Magazine Justin Davidson May 8 2011 Paquette Carole 6 April 2003 Macy s Montauk Houses a Cold War Footnote The New York Times Herbert Sadkin 72 Former L I Developer The New York Times 18 February 1989 norway architecture architecture norway www architecturenorway no Retrieved 2020 07 15 Geller Andrew Kahn Eve M 5 May 2011 In Search of Fun Among the Dunes The New York Times Nixon Richard Speech What Freedom Means to Us July 24 1959 a b c d e f g h i j Bailey Julia Tatiana 2017 03 01 The National Council of American Soviet Friendship and Art in the Shadow of the Cold War Archives of American Art Journal 56 1 42 65 doi 10 1086 692635 ISSN 0003 9853 S2CID 194392445 a b Dondero Communist Art in Government Hospitals Cong Rec 81st Cong 1st sess March 11 1949 vol 95 2364 65 and Dondero Communists Maneuver to Control Art in the United States Cong Rec 81st Cong 1st sess March 25 1949 vol 95 3297 98 Anticommunism and Modern Art www writing upenn edu Retrieved 2020 07 24 a b Whitman Alden 1971 03 14 Man of Multiple Skills The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2020 07 27 Blacklisted William Gropper s Capriccios Art in Print artinprint org Retrieved 2020 07 28 Kushner Marilyn S Winter 2002 Exhibiting Art at the American National Exhibition in Moscow 1959 Domestic Politics and Cultural Diplomacy Journal of Cold War Studies 4 no 1 7 Kushner Marilyn S Winter 2002 Exhibiting Art at the American National Exhibition in Moscow 1959 Domestic Politics and Cultural Diplomacy Journal of Cold War Studies 4 no 1 10 Kushner Marilyn S Winter 2002 Exhibiting Art at the American National Exhibition in Moscow 1959 Domestic Politics and Cultural Diplomacy Journal of Cold War Studies 4 no 1 17 a b United States Department of State 50th Anniversary of the American Exhibits to the U S S R United States Department of State Retrieved July 24 2020 Feifer Gregory 2 February 2012 Fifty Years Ago American Exhibition Stunned Soviets RadioFreeEurope RadioLiberty Retrieved July 15 2020 References EditHearings before the Committee on Un American Activities House of Representatives 1959 The American National Exhibition Moscow July 1959 Retrieved 6 February 2011 Kushner M S 2002 Exhibiting Art at the American National Exhibition in Moscow 1959 Domestic Politics and Cultural Diplomacy Journal of Cold War Studies 4 6 26 doi 10 1162 152039702753344807 S2CID 57560840 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title American National Exhibition amp oldid 1171676886, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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