"Jemma" (1965) by Igor Konstantinovich Skorobogatov is a portrait of a dog that quietly confronts the weight of service, sacrifice, and individualism.
The Dobermann, Jemma, stands alone. Her body is tense and alert. The stance is ready. Ears up. Tongue out. There’s no softness, no storybook heroism. The medals around her neck push the image even further. They’re not decorative. Nearly 70,000 dogs served in the Soviet military during WWII. Everything about her reinforces that this isn’t a pet, but a soldier.
But, what breaks the painting is its name. It isn’t called “Service Dog” or “Canine Unit.” It’s Jemma. The name pulls her out of the 70,000 strong collective. It’s a small gesture that reshapes the whole painting, shifting it from symbolic to a personal relationship with a dog.
The background is spare. A flat mix of greys, muddy browns, and a faint red shape behind her leg. Skorobogatov clears the frame of any narrative. The focus is Jemma, nothing else. It turns her into a kind of monument.
The style falls within the Socialist Realist tradition that shaped Soviet postwar art—but it breaks from it in one key way. There’s no triumph, no drama. Skorobogatov doesn’t romanticize or anthropomorphise. He doesn’t build a narrative. He just holds the image in place, and it’s that stillness that gives the painting its weight.
Born in 1920, Skorobogatov served on the Leningrad front. After the war, he studied at the Leningrad Institute of Painting, Sculpture, and Architecture. His work is now held in the State Russian Museum, the Tretyakov Gallery, and other major collections across Russia.