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Alexander Brodsky

Alexander Savvich Brodsky (1955) is a Russian architect and sculptor. He is one of Russia's best known architects, particularly for his works of paper architecture.

Alexander Savvich Brodsky
Born1955
Moscow, Russia
NationalityRussian
OccupationArchitect

Early work edit

Alexander Brodsky was educated at the Moscow Architecture Institute where he graduated in 1978.[1] Brodsky's first encounter with the public eye was during the late 1970s. He was a key member of the paper architects (visionary architecture), and furthermore, worked alongside Ilya Utkin in his etchings of distorted cityscapes.[2] Paper architecture was a response to state sanctioned architecture that consisted of standardised and often poorly constructed buildings, which imbued their environments with a communist aesthetic.[3] Such a response allowed paper architects to retreat into their imaginations and defy uniform Soviet architecture through vivid depictions of constructivism, deconstructivism and postmodernism.[4] According to Anna Sokolina, paper architects rose to prominence within the Western world as many of their works won prestigious awards in professional competitions[5] and helped to shape an understanding of Russian modern and postmodern architecture. Scholarship has shown that the whimsical and constructivist etchings of Brodsky and Utkin translate mere illustrations into narratives through the introduction of human characters. These were narratives that voiced man's alienation within the urban world[6] and provided a commentary on the loss of Moscows historical architectural heritage.[7]

Installations edit

Brodsky won his first architectural award in 1989 and was invited to New York by East Meets West, a not for profit organization established by Anneke van Waesberghe. His second trip to New York was in 1990 at the invitation of gallerist Ronald Feldman and then moved there in 1996 to complete public projects as well as personal installations.[8] In 1996 the Public Art Fund asked Brodsky to transform an unused set of tracks in the Canal Street subway station. Brodsky transformed the station for two months into a Venetian lagoon using a 5000-gallon tank, which held life-size gondolas and cut out passengers. In 1999 Brodsky created Palazzo Nudo in Pittsburgh, a 16-metre-high (52 ft) house shaped skeleton with the crumbled ruins of the metropolis heaped in the centre.[9] Coma, 2000, displayed at the Guelman Gallery in Moscow showed the city "as if it was in a hospital or on a surgeon's table" and his work produced for 2006 Venice Architecture Biennale was an ominous and foreboding comment on the doomed fate of Venice sinking into the sea.[10] Night Before the Attack, 2009, discusses the associations of emotion with structure and scale.[11] Brodsky used the title to enlighten the viewer's understanding of a story that lay beneath the artwork. Such a narrative has imbued new meaning and significance to the old structures that have been appropriated within the installation.

Built work edit

 
Alexander Brodsky, exposition in Jardin des Tuileries, Paris (2010)

Brodsky has really only been an architect since 2000, with his first commission in 2002. He claimed that his return from artistry to architecture was difficult. Despite the commission that Brodsky received upon each work, his efforts were burdened with a mental and physical toll – "I was near a serious mental problem. I'd never had this responsibility, and I was alone. It was my first experience communicating with workers and clients."[12] His first commission, 95 Degrees, a restaurant near Moscow on the Klyazma Reservoir shows Brodsky's specific and often wary architectural style. Everything is precisely thought out, from the materials of wood and plastic, to the subtle deformation of the wooden stilts (all are tilted at a 95-degree angle).[13] Also built in 2002 is Apshu, a restaurant – club hidden in the basement of a building Moscow, now defunct and demolished. The space was specifically framed through recycled window frames and created a sense of nostalgia that isn't usually found in postmodern work.[14] One of Brodsky's most famous works was the Vodka Ceremony Pavilion built in 2004 for a contemporary art festival at the Klyazma Reservoir, demolished in 2012. Again, recycled timber window frames are rescued from industrial buildings and reused. Painted white and forming the structure of the pavilion, the window frames create a sense of Russian tradition from the industrial heritage that defined 20th century Moscow. His projects often have a cerebral and ephemeral quality, despite often being permanent.[15] A literally ephemeral project, Brodsky produced a pavilion on the Klyazma Reservoir in 2003 from water sprayed over a metal mesh attached to a wooden structure. The pavilion was lit from the interior, causing the building to glow. When spring came, the ice melted and the structure was removed.

A small but international respected project was done in Austria, where Brodsky was invited to design one out of seven small bus stops in Krumbach.[16]

Brodskys projects are often built from nothing.[17] His use of recycled materials, window frames, glass and plastic bags to create new structures creates a unique aesthetic. His architectural style combines local and reused materials in such a way that creates buildings that feel both traditional and modern but remain inventive and original.[18]

Critics on his work edit

Brodsky has been revered in Soviet architectural culture since the late 1970s when he first entered the public sphere as a member of the paper architects.[19] Fellow Russians adore him and have called him the "most important Russian architect alive today".[20] His reputation as a paper architect has expanded beyond Russia. He maintains a global presence, achieved in collaboration with Ilya Utkin, as well as his built projects that display Brodsky's specific style, referred to as "New Russian Architecture" by architects in his own studio. According to Mark Lamster, Constantin Boym declared, "When it comes to Brodsky, there is a reverence – like he is our genius."[21]

The paper architects of the late 1970s and 1980s gained critical and commercial success outside of Russia through professional competitions[22] and exhibitions. Interest in Soviet paper architecture was high from the late 1980s until the early 2000s with many exhibitions across America, as well as in Western Europe.[23] This interest in Brodskys work allowed him to travel to America and to begin exhibiting his installations.

Brodsky's installations were well received (he was invited to participate in the 2006 Venice Biennale)[24] but did not, however, translate into commercial success. In light of this fact, Brodsky returned to his original profession – architecture. His buildings have been applauded for their tendency to incorporate traditional elements of Soviet architecture, such as form, material and techniques, into modern and unique structures.[25] They have also helped to define Russian architecture within the 21st Century, and more importantly, to determine the future direction of architectural culture.

Many viewers however criticise the lack of radicalism within his built works.[26] Whilst his earlier etchings and installations are an obvious reaction against the dehumanising nature of Soviet approved architecture and the lack of care for traditions, the anxiety and chaos of these works are not apparent in his built projects.[27] Brodsky says in reaction to this "I want to design spaces that make people feel good."[28]

Books edit

  • Brodsky & Utkin , Princeton Architectural Press, 2015. (ISBN 978-1616893163)

References edit

  1. ^ "BRODSKY, Alexandr Savvich," 1994. Retrieved 18 November 2011; available from http://www.artinfo.ru/artbank/scripts/english/author_base.idc?author_id=540
  2. ^ Lamster, Mark. "Return of the Prodigal Son" Metropolis Magazine, (May 2006).
  3. ^ Dorian Moore. "Paper Architecture," Spatial Agency. Retrieved 18 November 2011; available from http://www.spatialagency.net/database/paper.architects
  4. ^ Sokolina, Anna. "Alternative Identities: Conceptual Transformations in Soviet and Post-Soviet Architecture," ARTMargins Online, (2001).
  5. ^ Sokolina, Anna. "Alternative Identities: Conceptual Transformations in Soviet and Post-Soviet Architecture," ARTMargins Online, (2001).
  6. ^ Droitcour, Brian. "Alexander Brodsky," Artforum, 48 (2001).
  7. ^ Galilee, Beatrice. "Alexander Brodsky," Icon Magazine, 54 (2007).
  8. ^ Lamster, Mark. "Return of the Prodigal Son," Metropolis Magazine, (May 2006).
  9. ^ Lamster, Mark. "Return of the Prodigal Son," Metropolis Magazine, (May 2006).
  10. ^ Galilee, Beatrice. "Alexander Brodsky," Icon Magazine, 54 (2007).
  11. ^ Droitcour, Brian. "Alexander Brodsky," Artforum, 48 (2001).
  12. ^ Lamster, Mark. "Return of the Prodigal Son," Metropolis Magazine, (May 2006).
  13. ^ Galilee, Beatrice. "Alexander Brodsky," Icon Magazine, 54 (2007).
  14. ^ Lamster, Mark. "Return of the Prodigal Son," Metropolis Magazine, (May 2006).
  15. ^ Galilee, Beatrice. "Alexander Brodsky," Icon Magazine, 54 (2007).
  16. ^ "Bus Stop Krumbach Projekt Info". Gemeinde Krumbach (in German). Retrieved 26 June 2018.
  17. ^ Galilee, Beatrice. "Alexander Brodsky," Icon Magazine, 54 (2007).
  18. ^ Dorian Moore. "Alexander Brodsky," Spatial Agency. Retrieved 18 November 2011; available from http://www.spatialagency.net/database/alexander.brodsky
  19. ^ Lamster, Mark. "Return of the Prodigal Son," Metropolis Magazine, (May 2006).
  20. ^ Galilee, Beatrice. "Alexander Brodsky," Icon Magazine, 54 (2007).
  21. ^ Lamster, Mark. "Return of the Prodigal Son," Metropolis Magazine, (May 2006).
  22. ^ Sokolina, Anna. "Alternative Identities: Conceptual Transformations in Soviet and Post-Soviet Architecture," ARTMargins Online, (2001).
  23. ^ "BRODSKY, Alexandr Savvich," 1994. Retrieved 18 November 2011; available from http://www.artinfo.ru/artbank/scripts/english/author_base.idc?author_id=540
  24. ^ Galilee, Beatrice. "Alexander Brodsky," Icon Magazine, 54 (2007).
  25. ^ Lamster, Mark. "Return of the Prodigal Son," Metropolis Magazine, (May 2006).
  26. ^ Galilee, Beatrice. "Alexander Brodsky," Icon Magazine, 54 (2007).
  27. ^ Dorian Moore. "Alexander Brodsky," Spatial Agency. Retrieved 18 November 2011; available from http://www.spatialagency.net/database/alexander.brodsky
  28. ^ Galilee, Beatrice. "Alexander Brodsky," Icon Magazine, 54 (2007).

External links edit

  • Video Interview with Alexander Brodsky by CastYourArt

alexander, brodsky, this, biography, living, person, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, adding, reliable, sources, contentious, material, about, living, persons, that, unsourced, poorly, sourced, must, removed, immediately, from, article. This biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification Please help by adding reliable sources Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately from the article and its talk page especially if potentially libelous Find sources Alexander Brodsky news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message Alexander Savvich Brodsky 1955 is a Russian architect and sculptor He is one of Russia s best known architects particularly for his works of paper architecture Alexander Savvich BrodskyBorn1955Moscow RussiaNationalityRussianOccupationArchitect Contents 1 Early work 2 Installations 3 Built work 4 Critics on his work 5 Books 6 References 7 External linksEarly work editAlexander Brodsky was educated at the Moscow Architecture Institute where he graduated in 1978 1 Brodsky s first encounter with the public eye was during the late 1970s He was a key member of the paper architects visionary architecture and furthermore worked alongside Ilya Utkin in his etchings of distorted cityscapes 2 Paper architecture was a response to state sanctioned architecture that consisted of standardised and often poorly constructed buildings which imbued their environments with a communist aesthetic 3 Such a response allowed paper architects to retreat into their imaginations and defy uniform Soviet architecture through vivid depictions of constructivism deconstructivism and postmodernism 4 According to Anna Sokolina paper architects rose to prominence within the Western world as many of their works won prestigious awards in professional competitions 5 and helped to shape an understanding of Russian modern and postmodern architecture Scholarship has shown that the whimsical and constructivist etchings of Brodsky and Utkin translate mere illustrations into narratives through the introduction of human characters These were narratives that voiced man s alienation within the urban world 6 and provided a commentary on the loss of Moscows historical architectural heritage 7 Installations editBrodsky won his first architectural award in 1989 and was invited to New York by East Meets West a not for profit organization established by Anneke van Waesberghe His second trip to New York was in 1990 at the invitation of gallerist Ronald Feldman and then moved there in 1996 to complete public projects as well as personal installations 8 In 1996 the Public Art Fund asked Brodsky to transform an unused set of tracks in the Canal Street subway station Brodsky transformed the station for two months into a Venetian lagoon using a 5000 gallon tank which held life size gondolas and cut out passengers In 1999 Brodsky created Palazzo Nudo in Pittsburgh a 16 metre high 52 ft house shaped skeleton with the crumbled ruins of the metropolis heaped in the centre 9 Coma 2000 displayed at the Guelman Gallery in Moscow showed the city as if it was in a hospital or on a surgeon s table and his work produced for 2006 Venice Architecture Biennale was an ominous and foreboding comment on the doomed fate of Venice sinking into the sea 10 Night Before the Attack 2009 discusses the associations of emotion with structure and scale 11 Brodsky used the title to enlighten the viewer s understanding of a story that lay beneath the artwork Such a narrative has imbued new meaning and significance to the old structures that have been appropriated within the installation Built work edit nbsp Alexander Brodsky exposition in Jardin des Tuileries Paris 2010 Brodsky has really only been an architect since 2000 with his first commission in 2002 He claimed that his return from artistry to architecture was difficult Despite the commission that Brodsky received upon each work his efforts were burdened with a mental and physical toll I was near a serious mental problem I d never had this responsibility and I was alone It was my first experience communicating with workers and clients 12 His first commission 95 Degrees a restaurant near Moscow on the Klyazma Reservoir shows Brodsky s specific and often wary architectural style Everything is precisely thought out from the materials of wood and plastic to the subtle deformation of the wooden stilts all are tilted at a 95 degree angle 13 Also built in 2002 is Apshu a restaurant club hidden in the basement of a building Moscow now defunct and demolished The space was specifically framed through recycled window frames and created a sense of nostalgia that isn t usually found in postmodern work 14 One of Brodsky s most famous works was the Vodka Ceremony Pavilion built in 2004 for a contemporary art festival at the Klyazma Reservoir demolished in 2012 Again recycled timber window frames are rescued from industrial buildings and reused Painted white and forming the structure of the pavilion the window frames create a sense of Russian tradition from the industrial heritage that defined 20th century Moscow His projects often have a cerebral and ephemeral quality despite often being permanent 15 A literally ephemeral project Brodsky produced a pavilion on the Klyazma Reservoir in 2003 from water sprayed over a metal mesh attached to a wooden structure The pavilion was lit from the interior causing the building to glow When spring came the ice melted and the structure was removed A small but international respected project was done in Austria where Brodsky was invited to design one out of seven small bus stops in Krumbach 16 Brodskys projects are often built from nothing 17 His use of recycled materials window frames glass and plastic bags to create new structures creates a unique aesthetic His architectural style combines local and reused materials in such a way that creates buildings that feel both traditional and modern but remain inventive and original 18 Critics on his work editBrodsky has been revered in Soviet architectural culture since the late 1970s when he first entered the public sphere as a member of the paper architects 19 Fellow Russians adore him and have called him the most important Russian architect alive today 20 His reputation as a paper architect has expanded beyond Russia He maintains a global presence achieved in collaboration with Ilya Utkin as well as his built projects that display Brodsky s specific style referred to as New Russian Architecture by architects in his own studio According to Mark Lamster Constantin Boym declared When it comes to Brodsky there is a reverence like he is our genius 21 The paper architects of the late 1970s and 1980s gained critical and commercial success outside of Russia through professional competitions 22 and exhibitions Interest in Soviet paper architecture was high from the late 1980s until the early 2000s with many exhibitions across America as well as in Western Europe 23 This interest in Brodskys work allowed him to travel to America and to begin exhibiting his installations Brodsky s installations were well received he was invited to participate in the 2006 Venice Biennale 24 but did not however translate into commercial success In light of this fact Brodsky returned to his original profession architecture His buildings have been applauded for their tendency to incorporate traditional elements of Soviet architecture such as form material and techniques into modern and unique structures 25 They have also helped to define Russian architecture within the 21st Century and more importantly to determine the future direction of architectural culture Many viewers however criticise the lack of radicalism within his built works 26 Whilst his earlier etchings and installations are an obvious reaction against the dehumanising nature of Soviet approved architecture and the lack of care for traditions the anxiety and chaos of these works are not apparent in his built projects 27 Brodsky says in reaction to this I want to design spaces that make people feel good 28 Books editBrodsky amp Utkin Princeton Architectural Press 2015 ISBN 978 1616893163 References edit BRODSKY Alexandr Savvich 1994 Retrieved 18 November 2011 available from http www artinfo ru artbank scripts english author base idc author id 540 Lamster Mark Return of the Prodigal Son Metropolis Magazine May 2006 Dorian Moore Paper Architecture Spatial Agency Retrieved 18 November 2011 available from http www spatialagency net database paper architects Sokolina Anna Alternative Identities Conceptual Transformations in Soviet and Post Soviet Architecture ARTMargins Online 2001 Sokolina Anna Alternative Identities Conceptual Transformations in Soviet and Post Soviet Architecture ARTMargins Online 2001 Droitcour Brian Alexander Brodsky Artforum 48 2001 Galilee Beatrice Alexander Brodsky Icon Magazine 54 2007 Lamster Mark Return of the Prodigal Son Metropolis Magazine May 2006 Lamster Mark Return of the Prodigal Son Metropolis Magazine May 2006 Galilee Beatrice Alexander Brodsky Icon Magazine 54 2007 Droitcour Brian Alexander Brodsky Artforum 48 2001 Lamster Mark Return of the Prodigal Son Metropolis Magazine May 2006 Galilee Beatrice Alexander Brodsky Icon Magazine 54 2007 Lamster Mark Return of the Prodigal Son Metropolis Magazine May 2006 Galilee Beatrice Alexander Brodsky Icon Magazine 54 2007 Bus Stop Krumbach Projekt Info Gemeinde Krumbach in German Retrieved 26 June 2018 Galilee Beatrice Alexander Brodsky Icon Magazine 54 2007 Dorian Moore Alexander Brodsky Spatial Agency Retrieved 18 November 2011 available from http www spatialagency net database alexander brodsky Lamster Mark Return of the Prodigal Son Metropolis Magazine May 2006 Galilee Beatrice Alexander Brodsky Icon Magazine 54 2007 Lamster Mark Return of the Prodigal Son Metropolis Magazine May 2006 Sokolina Anna Alternative Identities Conceptual Transformations in Soviet and Post Soviet Architecture ARTMargins Online 2001 BRODSKY Alexandr Savvich 1994 Retrieved 18 November 2011 available from http www artinfo ru artbank scripts english author base idc author id 540 Galilee Beatrice Alexander Brodsky Icon Magazine 54 2007 Lamster Mark Return of the Prodigal Son Metropolis Magazine May 2006 Galilee Beatrice Alexander Brodsky Icon Magazine 54 2007 Dorian Moore Alexander Brodsky Spatial Agency Retrieved 18 November 2011 available from http www spatialagency net database alexander brodsky Galilee Beatrice Alexander Brodsky Icon Magazine 54 2007 External links editVideo Interview with Alexander Brodsky by CastYourArt Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alexander Brodsky amp oldid 1088962377, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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