Varvara Stepanova was a Soviet Constructivist artist whose 1932 photomontage The Results of the First Five-Year Plan uses collaged photographs and hierarchical scale to glorify Soviet political and economic achievements, making it a textbook case of art as state propaganda.
Varvara Stepanova was a member of the Soviet avant-garde, the group of Russian artists who believed art should serve the new communist state rather than hang in galleries. Her best-known work for AP purposes is The Results of the First Five-Year Plan (1932), an illustration built from collaged photographic imagery (photomontage). Instead of painting a scene, she cut and combined real photographs of workers, machinery, and leaders into one composition.
The design choices do the political work. Stepanova uses hierarchical scale, making politically important figures physically larger, and grouping, clustering masses of workers together, to send one unmistakable message. The Five-Year Plan succeeded, the Soviet system works, and the people and the state are one. Because she uses photographs, the propaganda borrows the authority of documentary truth. It looks like evidence, even though every piece was chosen and arranged to persuade.
Stepanova maps to Topic 10.4, Theories and Interpretations of Global Contemporary Art, and supports learning objective AP Art History 10.4.A, which asks you to explain how theories and interpretations of art are shaped by visual analysis plus outside evidence and scholarship. Her work is a perfect test case. Looked at purely formally, it's a dynamic, modern photomontage. Add historical context (Stalin's Five-Year Plan, state control of art) and the interpretation shifts to propaganda. That gap between what the work shows and what it was made to do is exactly the kind of interpretive argument 10.4 trains you to make. She also proved her exam relevance directly. The 2023 SAQ Question 6 put The Results of the First Five-Year Plan in front of students as a stimulus image.
Keep studying AP® Art History Unit 10
Soviet avant-garde (Unit 10)
Stepanova is your concrete example of this movement. The Soviet avant-garde rejected art-for-art's-sake and put design, photography, and graphics to work building the communist state, which is exactly what her photomontage does.
Scale in composition (Unit 10)
Stepanova revives one of the oldest tricks in art history. Hierarchical scale, where bigger means more important, goes back to ancient works like the Palette of King Narmer. She just applies it with cut-up photographs instead of carved stone, and to a dictator instead of a pharaoh.
Photomontage and Dada (Unit 4)
Stepanova used the same cut-and-paste photographic technique as the Berlin Dada artists, but flipped its purpose. Dada photomontage attacked governments; Stepanova's photomontage celebrates one. Same medium, opposite politics, which makes a great comparison point.
Grouping (Unit 10)
Stepanova clusters masses of workers into unified blocks within the composition. That grouping visually argues that Soviet citizens act as one collective body, turning a layout decision into a political claim.
Stepanova has appeared on the real exam. The 2023 SAQ Question 6 showed The Results of the First Five-Year Plan and identified it in the prompt as a 1932 work by Stepanova. That tells you what the exam wants. You don't need to recall the work cold; you need to analyze it on the spot. Be ready to name specific visual evidence (photomontage, hierarchical scale, grouping of figures) and connect each choice to intended meaning and audience, in this case glorifying Soviet achievement for a mass public. In multiple choice, she fits stems about how political context shapes interpretation, how artists adapt photographic media for persuasion, and how the same formal device can carry different meanings across periods.
Both made photomontages in the early 20th century, so they blur together fast. The difference is purpose and politics. Höch's Dada photomontage was anti-government critique, slicing up imagery to mock Weimar Germany. Stepanova's photomontage is pro-government propaganda, assembling imagery to glorify the Soviet state. If the work tears authority down, think Höch. If it builds authority up, think Stepanova.
Varvara Stepanova was a Soviet Constructivist artist who created The Results of the First Five-Year Plan in 1932.
The work is a photomontage, meaning it's built from collaged photographs, which makes the propaganda feel like documentary evidence.
Stepanova uses hierarchical scale and grouping to glorify Soviet leadership and present workers as a unified collective.
For Topic 10.4, her work shows how interpretation changes when you add context, since a formally striking design reads very differently once you know it's state propaganda.
The 2023 SAQ Question 6 used this work as a stimulus and identified it for students, so the tested skill was analysis, not memorized identification.
Stepanova and Hannah Höch both used photomontage, but Höch attacked the state while Stepanova celebrated it.
Stepanova was a Soviet Constructivist artist, part of the Soviet avant-garde, best known on the AP exam for The Results of the First Five-Year Plan (1932), a photomontage glorifying Soviet political and economic achievements.
No, it's the opposite. The Results of the First Five-Year Plan is pro-Soviet propaganda that celebrates Stalin's economic program. The collaged photographs and hierarchical scale are designed to make state success look like documented fact.
Both used photomontage, but Höch's Dada work critiqued and mocked government power in Weimar Germany, while Stepanova's 1932 work glorified Soviet state power. Same cut-and-paste technique, opposite political goals.
Yes. The 2023 exam's SAQ Question 6 showed The Results of the First Five-Year Plan and identified it as Stepanova's 1932 work, then asked students to analyze it. The exam gave the identification, so the points came from visual and contextual analysis.
Stepanova comes up in Topic 10.4 because that topic covers how theories and interpretations of art are shaped by context and evidence. Her photomontage is a clean example, since knowing the Soviet context completely changes how you interpret what looks like a bold modern design.
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