Reshaping Russian Architecture
Reshaping Russian Architecture examines the development of twentieth-century Russian architecture as it relates to the transformation of the imperial Russia into an industrialised Soviet empire and shows how Western notions of style and technology were assimilated on a massive scale into a uniquely Russian vision. Among the issues examined in articles by four distinguished historians of architecture and urban planning are: the decline of imperial architectural design during the mid-nineteenth century as occasioned by fundamental changes in aesthetic values and the social structure; the denouncement of the European capitalist economic system and consequent rejection of modern urban architecture during the period immediately prior to the 1917 revolution; and utopian concepts of modern urban design that were implemented during the interwar years of phenomenal industrial development. An important contribution to our understanding of Russian and Soviet culture in a critical period of its evolution, Reshaping Russian Architecture will also appeal to those interested in modern architecture and urban planning in general.
Product details
October 1990Hardback
9780521394185
240 pages
254 × 176 × 19 mm
0.728kg
100 b/w illus.
Unavailable - out of print September 2006
Table of Contents
- List of illustrations
- Acknowledgments
- Editor's note
- Introduction William C. Brumfield
- 1. From Palace Square to Moscow Square: St Petersburg's century-long retreat from public space Blair A. Ruble
- 2. Russian perceptions of American architecture, 1870-1917 William C. Brumfield
- 3. Architectural design in Moscow, 1890-1917: innovation and retrospection William C. Brumfield
- 4. Moscow's revolutionary architecture and its aftermath: a critical guide Blair A. Ruble
- 5. The realization of Utopia
- Western technology and Soviet avant-garde architecture Milka Bliznakov
- 6. Foreign architects in the Soviet Union during the first two five-Year Plans Manatole Kopp
- About the authors
- Index.