The visual arts in Russia are rooted in
lubok but this begins to change in the reign of
Peter the Great that is an "alternate" tradition of social and political caricature. Artists from western Europe contribute to this cultural shift by teaching at the
Imperial Academy of Arts in
Saint Petersburg. The Academy's charter is revised by
Catherine the Great and again in 1840 by
Nicholas I. Nicholas assumes power in 1825 establishing new censorship committees after the
Decembrist revolt that same year. During this time it becomes prohibited for artists or writers to mention political officials by name or to represent political views in their work. Censorship continues to expand in the upcoming decades. In 1840 the royal family is given control of the Academy and in 1848 the
Buturlin Committee is formed in response to the
Revolutions of 1848. Private art schools continue to operate in this era but artist's are for practical purposes dependent on state and imperial support for a living. After 1851 the lubok
folk art must be destroyed and new works to carry the censor's seal but unauthorized works were still made until the second half of the 19th century. These uncensored
lubki depicted the religious, literary and other themes and motifs of folklore common for this art form. The political developments between 1857 and 1863 are complex. Russia has just been defeated in the
Crimean War and there is public dialogue about the abolition of
serfdom that is realized in 1861. Stepanov is involved during this period becoming one of the most influential of Russian artists as a new style of
satire. When the periodical
Hotchpotch he contributes to is shut down in 1869 he continues as editor of
Spark that he co-founded with poet Kurochkin. The successor of
Spark is
Alarm Clock that is shut down in 1873. Stepanov's work
Do you Feel any Freer Now? is censored for visual representation of a peasant who looks like
Alexander II being led along on a rope by a landowner. Another of his caricature works showed editors waiting outside the censor's office on line forced to defend their works. ==References==