What are the Soviet ‘Kukryniksy’ caricaturists famous for?

Culture
ALEXANDRA GUZEVA
The trio of artists – Mikhail Kupriyanov, Porfiry Krylov and Nikolai Sokolov – are widely known not only in Russia, but also abroad. Their political cartoons have become true classics of the genre.

Viewers and readers are already amazed by any creative duo: how can two people work together? But to have three co-authors working on a project!? They spent more than 60 years side by side, until the death of one of them destroyed the union.

Why are they called ‘Kukryniksy’?

Young artists Mikhail Kupriyanov and Porfiry Krylov met in the early 1920s as students of the Higher Art and Technical Studios (Vkhutemas), the main proletarian forge of painters, sculptors and architects. Together, they began working in the local wall newspaper, signing their drawings with ‘KuKry’, the first letters of their last names, KUpriyanov and KRYlov.

In 1924, Nikolai Sokolov joined their duo, who already had the creative pseudonym ‘Niks’. This is how the ‘KuKryNiksy’ came to be (‘-y’ at the end is the Russian form of implying plural). 

Search for a creative method

The young artists immediately defined a common style and went beyond the student wall newspaper. The trio drew caricatures for the ‘Pravda’ newspaper and satirical magazines, such as ‘Krokodil’.

In the 1920s, their main work was caricatures on literary and cultural themes, everyday topics, as well as parody sketches of famous people. 

‘Kukryniksy’ also worked with the theater, trying their hand as costume designers and stage designers. In the mid-1930s, their series of friendly caricatures of directors Konstantin Stanislavsky and Vsevolod Meyerhold, composer Sergei Prokofiev and actors Vasily Kachalov and Ivan Moskvin were re-produced in porcelain. And they won a gold medal at the 1937 International Exhibition of Art and Technology in Paris.

‘Kukryniks’ also practiced book illustration, in particular for satirical works by Nikolai Gogol, Mikhail Saltykov-Shchedrin and main Soviet writer Maxim Gorky.

Political caricature

It was Gorky who suggested witty humor for the direction of the trio, advising the other two to “look more often into Europe, across the ocean, beyond all our borders”. And from the early 1930s, the name ‘Kukryniksy’ became virtually synonymous with political cartoons.

Their main techniques were grotesque and hyperbole. They used vivid metaphors, endowed inanimate objects with human features and added animal elements to famous personalities. They worked for official propaganda, denouncing Stalin's political rivals, the Provisional Government and enemies of the revolution. The expressive style of the ‘Kukryniksy’ became very recognizable.

The artists' satire was directed at international politics and they were particularly fierce in their attacks on the Nazis during their rise to power and the international community's attempt to forge alliances with them.

Anti-war & anti-fascist posters

The real peak of the artists’ fame came during World War II. By the evening of June 22, 1941, when Germany attacked the USSR, ‘Kukryniksy’ had created a sketch of the poster with the caption: “Ruthlessly defeat and destroy the enemy!” Already in two days, it appeared on the streets of many cities of the country.

‘Kukryniks’ also supported the psychological mood of Soviet citizens and the fighting spirit of soldiers. 

Throughout the war, the three artists drew dozens of posters and caricatures of Hitler and the German leadership, as well as Mussolini and other Nazi allies.

They also drew leaflets for German soldiers, calling on them to surrender. The impact of the cartoons was so great that the artists' names even appeared on Hitler's hit list.

After the war, ‘Kukryniksy’, together with poet Samuil Marshak, published a couple of books for children about the war, ‘Kaput’ and ‘History Lesson’.

Nuremberg Trials

The fame and prestige of the ‘Kukryniksy’ was so high after the war that the three of them were sent as journalists to the Nuremberg trials.

Mikhail Sokolov, the son of artist Nikolai Sokolov, recalled that the Soviet cartoonists' sketches from the trial were immediately published in newspapers (and not only Soviet ones) and that they were a great success. One of the American officers guarding the tribunal allegedly even offered to move ‘Kukryniksy’ closer to the defendants in exchange for their autograph.

After the process, ‘Kukryniksy’ painted a large-scale canvas titled: ‘Accusation. The Nuremberg Trials’.

The artists had something to say even later. A series of their posters in the 1960s and 1970s were dedicated to the Cold War. 

Working together & apart

“They always worked together. Literally. And, for 60 years, they never even quarreled once,” recalled Nikolai Sokolov’s son, Mikhail. By the way, the artists even lived in close proximity. All three of them were given apartments in the same house on Chkalovskaya Street in Moscow.  

If the trio was commissioned to draw a cartoon on a certain topic, they went off in different directions and sketched separately. Then, together, they looked at what they had come up with and combined the best ideas into a single work. Almost all the works were drawn together, with each one responsible for a certain part.

They also worked separately from each other on realistic style canvases. They painted landscapes, portraits and urban scenes. However, the artists signed such paintings not with their collective pseudonym, but with their own names.

The ROSIZO center’s ‘Kukryniksy' exhibition is on display at the Moscow Manege until December 15, 2024.