ON 11 SEPTEMBER 1930, Rabindranath Tagore—seen here meeting Soviet artists, who presented him with the death mask of the novelist Leo Tolstoy—arrived in Moscow as part of his travels in Europe and North America. Tagore had first expressed a desire to visit the Soviet Union in a 1924 meeting with Lev Karakhan, the Soviet ambassador to China. The All-Union Society for Cultural Relations with Foreign Countries, known by the Russian acronym VOKS, sent Tagore several invitations over the next few years, but ill health prevented him from visiting sooner. In July 1930, he was personally invited by Anatoly Lunacharsky, the Soviet education minister, whom he met in Berlin.
Over the fortnight he spent in Moscow, Tagore met several writers, artists, academics, students, government officials, workers and peasants, besides attending plays…