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Constructivist architecture

Constructivist architecture was a constructivist style of modern architecture that flourished in the Soviet Union in the 1920s and early 1930s. Abstract and austere, the movement aimed to reflect modern industrial society and urban space, while rejecting decorative stylization in favor of the industrial assemblage of materials.[1] Designs combined advanced technology and engineering with an avowedly communist social purpose. Although it was divided into several competing factions, the movement produced many pioneering projects and finished buildings, before falling out of favor around 1932.[2] It has left marked effects on later developments in architecture.

Tatlin's Tower, The Monument to the Third International, 1919 (Vladimir Tatlin)

Definition edit

 
Shukhov Tower, Moscow, 1922. Currently under threat of demolition, but with an international campaign to save it.[3]

Constructivist architecture emerged from the wider Constructivist art movement, which grew out of Russian Futurism. Constructivist art had attempted to apply a three-dimensional cubist vision to wholly abstract non-objective 'constructions' with a kinetic element. After the Russian Revolution of 1917, it turned its attentions to the new social demands and industrial tasks required of the new regime. Two distinct threads emerged, the first was encapsulated in Antoine Pevsner's and Naum Gabo's Realist manifesto which was concerned with space and rhythm, the second represented a struggle within the Commissariat for Enlightenment between those who argued for pure art and the Productivists such as Alexander Rodchenko, Varvara Stepanova and Vladimir Tatlin, a more socially-oriented group who wanted this art to be absorbed in industrial production.[4]

A split occurred in 1922 when Pevsner and Gabo emigrated. The movement then developed along socially utilitarian lines. The productivist majority gained the support of the Proletkult and the magazine LEF, and later became the dominant influence of the architectural group O.S.A.

A revolution in architecture edit

 
The print shop of Ogonyok magazine designed by El Lissitzky

The first and most famous Constructivist architectural project was the 1919 proposal for the headquarters of the Comintern in St Petersburg by the Futurist Vladimir Tatlin, often called Tatlin's Tower. Though it remained unbuilt, the materials—glass and steel—and its futuristic ethos and political slant (the movements of its internal volumes were meant to symbolise revolution and the dialectic) set the tone for the projects of the 1920s.[5]

Another famous early Constructivist project was the Lenin Tribune by El Lissitzky (1920), a moving speaker's podium. During the Russian Civil War the UNOVIS group centered on Kasimir Malevich and Lissitzky designed various projects that forced together the 'non-objective' abstraction of Suprematism with more utilitarian aims, creating ideal Constructivist cities— see also El Lissitzky's Prounen-Raum, the 'Dynamic City' (1919) of Gustav Klutsis; Lazar Khidekel's Workers Club (1926) and his Dubrovka Power Plant and first Sots Town (1931–33).

ASNOVA and rationalism edit

Immediately after the Russian Civil War, the USSR was too impoverished to commission any major new building projects. Nonetheless, the Soviet avant-garde school Vkhutemas started an architectural wing in 1921, which was led by the architect Nikolai Ladovsky, which was called ASNOVA (association of new architects). The teaching methods were both functional and fantastic, reflecting an interest in Gestalt psychology, leading to daring experiments with form such as Simbirchev's glass-clad suspended restaurant.[6] Among the architects affiliated to the ASNOVA (Association of New Architects) were El Lissitzky, Konstantin Melnikov, Vladimir Krinsky and the young Berthold Lubetkin.[7]

 
Zuev Workers' Club, 1927

Projects from 1923 to 1935 like Lissitzky and Mart Stam's Wolkenbügel horizontal skyscrapers and Konstantin Melnikov's temporary pavilions showed the originality and ambition of this new group. Melnikov would design the Soviet Pavilion at the Paris Exposition of Decorative Arts of 1925, which popularised the new style, with its rooms designed by Rodchenko and its jagged, mechanical form.[5] Another glimpse of a Constructivist lived environment is visible in the popular science fiction film Aelita, which had interiors and exteriors modelled in angular, geometric fashion by Aleksandra Ekster. The state-run Mosselprom department store of 1924 was also an early modernist building for the new consumerism of the New Economic Policy, as was the Vesnin brothers' Mostorg store, built three years later. Modern offices for the mass press were also popular, such as the Izvestia headquarters.[8] This was built in 1926–7 and designed by Grigori Barkhin[9]

OSA edit

 
Barsch/Sinyavsky, Moscow Planetarium, 1929

A colder and more technological Constructivist style was introduced by the 1923/4 glass office project by the Vesnin brothers for Leningradskaya Pravda. In 1925 the OSA Group, also with ties to Vkhutemas, was founded by Alexander Vesnin and Moisei Ginzburg—the Organisation of Contemporary Architects. This group had much in common with Weimar Germany's Functionalism, such as the housing projects of Ernst May.[5] Housing, especially collective housing in specially designed dom kommuny to replace the collectivised 19th century housing that was the norm, was the main priority of this group. The term social condenser was coined to describe their aims, which followed from the ideas of V.I. Lenin, who wrote in 1919 that "the real emancipation of women and real communism begins with the mass struggle against these petty household chores and the true reforming of the mass into a vast socialist household."

 
Rusakov Workers' Club in Moscow by Konstantin Melnikov, 1927–28

Collective housing projects that were built included Ivan Nikolaev's Communal House of the Textile Institute (Ordzhonikidze St, Moscow, 1929–1931), and Ginzburg's Moscow Gosstrakh flats and, most famously, his Narkomfin Building.[9] Flats were built in a Constructivist idiom in Kharkiv, Moscow and Leningrad and in smaller towns. Ginzburg also designed a government building in Alma-Ata, while the Vesnin brothers designed a School of Film Actors in Moscow. Ginzburg critiqued the idea of building in the new society being the same as in the old: "treating workers' housing in the same way as they would bourgeois apartments...the Constructivists however approach the same problem with maximum consideration for those shifts and changes in our everyday life...our goal is the collaboration with the proletariat in creating a new way of life".[10] OSA published a magazine, SA or Contemporary Architecture from 1926 to 1930. The leading rationalist Ladovsky designed his own, rather different kind of mass housing, completing a Moscow apartment block in 1929. A particularly extravagant example is the 'Chekists Village' in Sverdlovsk (now Yekaterinburg) designed by Ivan Antonov, Veniamin Sokolov and Arseny Tumbasov, a hammer and sickle shaped collective housing complex for staff of the People's Commissariat for the Internal Affairs (NKVD), which currently serves as a hotel.

The everyday and the utopian edit

 
Narkomfin Building in Moscow by Moisei Ginzburg before its restoration in 2020. The building was at the top of UNESCO's 'Endangered Buildings' list, and there was an international campaign to save it.
 
Svoboda Factory Club by Melnikov, Moscow

The new forms of the Constructivists began to symbolise the project for a new everyday life of the Soviet Union, then in the mixed economy of the New Economic Policy.[11] State buildings were constructed like the huge Derzhprom complex in Kharkiv[12] (designed by Serafimov, Folger and Kravets, 1926–1928) which was noted by Reyner Banham in his Theory and Design in the First Machine Age as being, along with the Dessau Bauhaus, the largest scale Modernist work of the 1920s.[13] Other notable works included the aluminum parabola and glazed staircase of Mikhail Barsch and Mikhail Sinyavsky's 1929 Moscow Planetarium.

 
House of Printing (1935) in Kazan by Semen Pen

The popularity of the new aesthetic led to traditionalist architects adopting Constructivism, as in Ivan Zholtovsky's 1926 MOGES power station or Alexey Shchusev's Narkomzem offices, both in Moscow.[14] Similarly, the engineer Vladimir Shukhov's Shukhov Tower was often seen as an avant-garde work and was, according to Walter Benjamin in his Moscow Diary, 'unlike any similar structure in the West'.[15] Shukhov also collaborated with Melnikov on the Bakhmetevsky Bus Garage and Novo-Ryazanskaya Street Garage.[5] Many of these buildings are shown in Sergei Eisenstein's film The General Line, which also featured a specially built mock-up Constructivist collective farm designed by Andrey Burov.

A central aim of the Constructivists was instilling the avant-garde in everyday life. From 1927 they worked on projects for Workers' Clubs, communal leisure facilities usually built in factory districts. Among the most famous of these are the Kauchuk, Svoboda and Rusakov clubs by Konstantin Melnikov, the club of the Likachev works by the Vesnin brothers, and Ilya Golosov's Zuev Workers' Club.

 
DniproGES (1932) by Vesnin Brothers

At the same time as this foray into the everyday, outlandish projects were designed such as Ivan Leonidov's Lenin Institute, a high tech work that bears comparison with Buckminster Fuller. This consisted of a skyscraper-sized library, a planetarium and dome, all linked together by a monorail; or Georgy Krutikov's self-explanatory Flying City, an ASNOVA project that was intended as a serious proposal for airborne housing. The Melnikov House and his Bakhmetevsky Bus Garage are fine examples of the tensions between individualism and utilitarianism in Constructivism.

There were also projects for Suprematist skyscrapers called 'planits' or 'architektons' by Kasimir Malevich, Lazar Khikeidel – Cosmic Habitats (1921–1922), Architectons (1922–1927), Workers Club (1926), Communal Dwelling (Коммунальное Жилище)(1927), A. Nikolsky and L. Khidekel – Moscow Cooperative Institute (1929). The fantastical element also found expression in the work of Yakov Chernikhov, who produced several books of experimental designs—most famously Architectural Fantasies (1933)—earning him the epithet 'the Soviet Piranesi'.

The Sotsgorod and town planning edit

 
Town Hall by Noi Trotsky, Leningrad, 1932–1934

Despite the ambitiousness of many Constructivist proposals for reconstructed cities, there were fairly few examples of coherent Constructivist town planning. However, the Narvskaya Zastava district of Leningrad became a focus for Constructivism. Beginning in 1925 communal housing was designed for the area by architects like A. Gegello and OSA's Alexander Nikolsky, as well as public buildings like the Kirov Town Hall by Noi Trotsky (1932–4), an experimental school by G.A Simonov and a series of Communal laundries and kitchens, designed for the area by local ASNOVA members.[16]

Many of the Constructivists hoped to see their ambitions realised during the 'Cultural Revolution' that accompanied the first five-year plan. At this point the Constructivists were divided between urbanists and disurbanists who favoured a garden city or linear city model. The Linear City was propagandised by the head of the Finance Commissariat Nikolay Milyutin in his book Sozgorod, aka Sotsgorod (1930). This was taken to a more extreme level by the OSA theorist Mikhail Okhitovich. His disurbanism proposed a system of one-person or one-family buildings connected by linear transport networks, spread over a huge area that traversed the boundaries between the urban and agricultural, in which it resembled a socialist equivalent of Frank Lloyd Wright's Broadacre City. The disurbanists and urbanists proposed projects for new cities such as Magnitogorsk were often rejected in favour of the more pragmatic German architects fleeing Nazism, such as 'May Brigade' (Ernst May, Mart Stam, Margarete Schütte-Lihotzky), the 'Bauhaus Brigade' led by Hannes Meyer, and Bruno Taut.

The city-planning of Le Corbusier found brief favour, with the architect writing a 'reply to Moscow' that later became the Ville Radieuse plan, and designing the Tsentrosoyuz government building with the Constructivist Nikolai Kolli. The duplex apartments and collective facilities of the OSA group were a major influence on his later work. Another famous modernist, Erich Mendelsohn, designed Leningrad's Red Banner Textile Factory and popularised Constructivism in his book Russland, Europa, Amerika. A Five Year Plan project with major Constructivist input was DnieproGES, designed by Victor Vesnin et al. El Lissitzky also popularised the style abroad with his 1930 book The Reconstruction of Architecture in Russia.

The end of constructivism edit

 
Intourist Garage by Konstantin Melnikov, 1933
 
Political Convicts House in Saint Petersburg, 1933

The 1932 competition for the Palace of the Soviets, a grandiose project to rival the Empire State Building, featured entries from all the major Constructivists as well as Walter Gropius, Erich Mendelsohn and Le Corbusier. However, this coincided with widespread criticism of Modernism, which was always difficult to sustain in a still mostly agrarian country. There was also the critique that the style merely copied the forms of technology while using fairly routine construction methods.[17] The winning entry by Boris Iofan marked the start of eclectic historicism of Stalinist Architecture, a style which bears similarities to Post-Modernism in that it reacted against modernist architecture's cosmopolitanism, alleged ugliness and inhumanity with a pick and mix of historical styles, sometimes achieved with new technology. Housing projects like the Narkomfin were designed for the attempts to reform everyday life in the 1920s, such as collectivisation of facilities, equality of the sexes and collective raising of children, all of which fell out of favour as Stalinism revived family values. The styles of the old world were also revived, with the Moscow Metro in particular popularising the idea of 'workers' palaces'.

A.Kuznetsov, V.Movchan, G.Movchan, L.Meilman, All-Union Electrotechnical Institute, Moscow, 1927–1930 (video)

By the end of the 1920s Constructivism was the country's dominant architecture, and surprisingly many buildings of this period survive. Initially the reaction was towards an art decoesque Classicism that was initially inflected with Constructivist devices, such as in Iofan's House on Embankment of 1929–32. For a few years some structures were designed in a composite style sometimes called Postconstructivism.

After this brief synthesis, Neo-Classical reaction was totally dominant until 1955. Rationalist buildings were still common in industrial architecture, but extinct in urban projects. Last isolated constructivist buildings were launched in 1933–1935, such as Panteleimon Golosov's Pravda building (finished 1935),[18] the Moscow Textile Institute (finished 1938) or Ladovsky's rationalist vestibules for the Moscow Metro. Clearly Modernist competition entries were made by the Vesnin brothers and Ivan Leonidov for the Narkomtiazhprom project in Red Square, 1934, another unbuilt Stalinist edifice. Traces of Constructivism can also be found in some Socialist Realist works, for instance in the Futurist elevations of Iofan's ultra-Stalinist 1937 Paris Pavilion, which had Suprematist interiors by Nikolai Suetin.

Legacy edit

Due in part to its political commitment—and its replacement by Stalinist architecture—the mechanistic, dynamic forms of Constructivism were not part of the calm Platonism of the International Style as it was defined by Philip Johnson and Henry-Russell Hitchcock. Their book included only one building from the USSR, an electrical laboratory by a government team led by Nikolaev.[19] During the 1960s Constructivism was rehabilitated to a certain extent, and both the wilder experimental buildings of the era (such as the Globus Theatre or the Tbilisi Roads Ministry Building) and the unornamented Khrushchyovka apartments are in a sense a continuation of the aborted experiment, although under very different conditions. Outside the USSR, Constructivism has often been seen as an alternative, more radical modernism, and its legacy can be seen in designers as diverse as Team 10, Archigram and Kenzo Tange, as well as in much Brutalist work. Their integration of the avant-garde and everyday life has parallels with the Situationists, particularly the New Babylon project of Guy Debord and Constant Nieuwenhuys.

High Tech architecture also owes a debt to Constructivism, most obviously in Richard Rogers' Lloyd's building. Zaha Hadid's early projects were adaptations of Malevich's Architektons, and the influence of Chernikhov is clear on her drawings. Deconstructivism evokes the dynamism of Constructivism, though without the social aspect, as in the work of Coop Himmelb(l)au. In the late 1970s Rem Koolhaas wrote a parable on the political trajectory of Constructivism called The Story of the Pool, in which Constructivists escape from the USSR in a self-powering Modernist swimming pool, only to die, after being criticised for much the same reasons as they were under Stalinism, soon after their arrival in the USA. Meanwhile, many of the original Constructivist buildings are poorly preserved or in danger of imminent demolition.[20]

Gallery edit

Constructivist buildings and other modernist projects in the former USSR edit

Moscow edit

Leningrad (Saint-Petersburg) edit

  • Stadium for metal workers "Red Profintern" (1927) by [Aleksandr Nikolsky] and [Lazar Khidekel]
  • Red Flag Textile Factory (1929) by [Erich Mendelsohn]
  • Bolshoy Dom in Leningrad (1932) by Noi Trotsky, Alexander Gegello and Andrey Ol.
  • Kirov District House of Soviets (1935) by Noi Trotsky
  • Moscow District House of Soviets (1935) by Igor Fomin, Igor Daugul and Boris Serebrovsky
  • 1st House of Lensovet (1934) by Evgeny Levinson and Igor Fomin
  • Club for the shipyard workers in Leningrad. by [Aleksandr Nikolsky] and [Lazar Khidekel]
  • Pumping station. Vasilyeostrovskaya pumping station near the harbor in Leningrad. Construction (1929-1930)by [Lazar Khidekel]
  • Dubrovskiy Electro Power Station S.M. Kirov and Residential settlement Doubrovskaya HPP. Planning and construction of the first in the Soviet Union socialist town - sotsrogodok for workers and specialists (1931-1933) by [Lazar Khidekel]

Minsk edit

Kharkiv edit

Zaporizhzhia edit

Sverdlovsk (Ekaterinburg) edit

  • Builders Club (1929) by Yakov Kornfeld
  • House of Printing (1930) by Vladimir Sigov
  • 'Gorodok chekistov' (1933) by Ivan Antonov, Veniamin Sokolov and Arseny Tumbasov
  • House of Communications (1933) by Kasyan Solomonov

Kuybyshev (Samara) edit

  • House of Red Army (1930) by Pyotr Scherbachov
  • Factory kitchen (1933) by Evgenya Maksimova
  • House of Industry (1933) by Vasily Sukhov

Novosibirsk edit

Non-implemented projects edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Constructivism". Tate Modern. Retrieved 9 April 2020.
  2. ^ Hunt, Ronald (1 October 1967). "THE CONSTRUCTIVIST ETHOS: RUSSIA 1913–1932 (PART II)". Artforum. Retrieved 24 February 2024.
  3. ^ Lord Foster fires up campaign to save Shukhov Tower: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2010/apr/15/radio-tower-campaign-russia-foster
  4. ^ Oliver Stallybrass, Alan Bullock; et al. (1988). The Fontana Dictionary of Modern Thought (Paperback). Fontana press. p. 918 pages. ISBN 0-00-686129-6.
  5. ^ a b c d Frampton, Kenneth (2004). Modern architecture — a critical history (Paperback) (Third ed.). World of Art. p. 376 pages. ISBN 0-500-20257-5.
  6. ^ see the picture here: . Archived from the original on 15 April 2008. Retrieved 7 April 2007.
  7. ^ Cooke, Catherine (1990). Architectural Drawings of the Russian Avant Garde (Hardback). Harry N. Abrams, Inc. p. 143 pages. ISBN 0-8109-6000-1.
  8. ^ "Izvestia Building Moscow by Grigory Barkhin". galinsky.com. Retrieved 15 August 2015.
  9. ^ a b S.N Khan-Magomedov, Pioneers of Soviet Architecture (1988).
  10. ^ quoted in Art and Revolution ed Campbell/Lynton, Hayward Gallery London 1971
  11. ^ See the discussion in Victor Buchli's, An Archeology of Socialism (2000)
  12. ^ pictures here: http://www.kharkov.ua/about/svobody-e.htmFreedom Square, Kharkiv
  13. ^ Reyner Banham, Theory and Design in the First Machine Age (Architectural Press, 1971), p297.
  14. ^ "Narkomzem (Agriculture Ministry) Moscow by Aleksey Shchusev". galinsky.com. Retrieved 15 August 2015.
  15. ^ Benjamin, Walter, Moscow Diary
  16. ^ Chto Delat/What is to be Done issue on Narvskaya Zastava: http://www.chtodelat.org/images/pdfs/Chtodelat_07.pdf[permanent dead link] and also St Petersburg Wandering Camera on Simonov's school: http://www.enlight.ru/camera/354/index_e.html
  17. ^ Catherine Cooke, The Avant-Garde.
  18. ^ Archive photo: . Archived from the original on 15 April 2008. Retrieved 7 April 2007.
  19. ^ Illustrated here: . Archived from the original on 15 April 2008. Retrieved 7 April 2007.
  20. ^ See interview with film director Isa Willinger here: http://awayfromallsuns.de/de/on_constructivism/ 5 November 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  21. ^ "Reportaje | Cuatro generaciones viviendo entre pétalos y arquitecturas racionales".

Bibliography edit

  • Reyner Banham, Theory and Design in the First Machine Age (Architectural Press, 1972)
  • Victor Buchli, An Archaeology of Socialism (Berg, 2002)
  • Campbell/Lynton (eds.), Art and Revolution (Hayward Gallery, London 1971)
  • Catherine Cooke, Architectural Drawings of the Russian Avant-Garde (MOMA, 1990)
  • Catherine Cooke, The Avant Garde (AD magazine, 1988)
  • Catherine Cooke, "Fantasy and Construction: Iakov Chernikhov" (AD magazine, vol. 59 no. 7–8, London 1989)
  • Catherine Cooke & Igor Kazus, Soviet Architectural Competitions (Phaidon, 1992)
  • Kenneth Frampton, Modern Architecture: a Critical Introduction (Thames & Hudson, 1980)
  • Moisei Ginzburg, Style and Epoch (MIT, 1981)
  • S. Khan-Magomedov, Alexander Vesnin and Russian Constructivism (Thames & Hudson 1986)
  • S. Khan-Magomedov, Pioneers of Soviet Architecture (Thames & Hudson 1988), ISBN 978-0-500-34102-5
  • S. Khan-Magomedov. 100 Masterpieces of Soviet Avant-garde Architecture

Russian Academy of Architecture. M., Editorial URSS, 2005

  • S. Khan-Magomedov. Lazar Khidekel (Creators of Russian Classical Avant-garde series)

M., 2008

External links edit

  • Constructivist architecture on YouTube
  • Documentary on Moscow's Constructivist buildings 27 September 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  • — April 2006 Conference by the Moscow Architectural Preservation Society (MAPS)
  • Guardian article on preserving Constructivist buildings
  • Constructivist designs at the Russian Utopia Depository
  • Constructivism and Postconstructivism at St Petersburg's Wandering Camera
  • Short film on the heavily Constructivist-influenced buildings that Berthold Lubetkin designed for Dudley Zoo in the 1930s on YouTube
  • - slideshow by Life magazine

constructivist, architecture, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jsto. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Constructivist architecture news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Constructivist architecture was a constructivist style of modern architecture that flourished in the Soviet Union in the 1920s and early 1930s Abstract and austere the movement aimed to reflect modern industrial society and urban space while rejecting decorative stylization in favor of the industrial assemblage of materials 1 Designs combined advanced technology and engineering with an avowedly communist social purpose Although it was divided into several competing factions the movement produced many pioneering projects and finished buildings before falling out of favor around 1932 2 It has left marked effects on later developments in architecture Tatlin s Tower The Monument to the Third International 1919 Vladimir Tatlin Contents 1 Definition 2 A revolution in architecture 3 ASNOVA and rationalism 4 OSA 5 The everyday and the utopian 6 The Sotsgorod and town planning 7 The end of constructivism 8 Legacy 9 Gallery 10 Constructivist buildings and other modernist projects in the former USSR 10 1 Moscow 10 2 Leningrad Saint Petersburg 10 3 Minsk 10 4 Kharkiv 10 5 Zaporizhzhia 10 6 Sverdlovsk Ekaterinburg 10 7 Kuybyshev Samara 10 8 Novosibirsk 10 9 Non implemented projects 11 References 12 Bibliography 13 External linksDefinition edit nbsp Shukhov Tower Moscow 1922 Currently under threat of demolition but with an international campaign to save it 3 Constructivist architecture emerged from the wider Constructivist art movement which grew out of Russian Futurism Constructivist art had attempted to apply a three dimensional cubist vision to wholly abstract non objective constructions with a kinetic element After the Russian Revolution of 1917 it turned its attentions to the new social demands and industrial tasks required of the new regime Two distinct threads emerged the first was encapsulated in Antoine Pevsner s and Naum Gabo s Realist manifesto which was concerned with space and rhythm the second represented a struggle within the Commissariat for Enlightenment between those who argued for pure art and the Productivists such as Alexander Rodchenko Varvara Stepanova and Vladimir Tatlin a more socially oriented group who wanted this art to be absorbed in industrial production 4 A split occurred in 1922 when Pevsner and Gabo emigrated The movement then developed along socially utilitarian lines The productivist majority gained the support of the Proletkult and the magazine LEF and later became the dominant influence of the architectural group O S A A revolution in architecture edit nbsp The print shop of Ogonyok magazine designed by El Lissitzky The first and most famous Constructivist architectural project was the 1919 proposal for the headquarters of the Comintern in St Petersburg by the Futurist Vladimir Tatlin often called Tatlin s Tower Though it remained unbuilt the materials glass and steel and its futuristic ethos and political slant the movements of its internal volumes were meant to symbolise revolution and the dialectic set the tone for the projects of the 1920s 5 Another famous early Constructivist project was the Lenin Tribune by El Lissitzky 1920 a moving speaker s podium During the Russian Civil War the UNOVIS group centered on Kasimir Malevich and Lissitzky designed various projects that forced together the non objective abstraction of Suprematism with more utilitarian aims creating ideal Constructivist cities see also El Lissitzky s Prounen Raum the Dynamic City 1919 of Gustav Klutsis Lazar Khidekel s Workers Club 1926 and his Dubrovka Power Plant and first Sots Town 1931 33 ASNOVA and rationalism editImmediately after the Russian Civil War the USSR was too impoverished to commission any major new building projects Nonetheless the Soviet avant garde school Vkhutemas started an architectural wing in 1921 which was led by the architect Nikolai Ladovsky which was called ASNOVA association of new architects The teaching methods were both functional and fantastic reflecting an interest in Gestalt psychology leading to daring experiments with form such as Simbirchev s glass clad suspended restaurant 6 Among the architects affiliated to the ASNOVA Association of New Architects were El Lissitzky Konstantin Melnikov Vladimir Krinsky and the young Berthold Lubetkin 7 nbsp Zuev Workers Club 1927 Projects from 1923 to 1935 like Lissitzky and Mart Stam s Wolkenbugel horizontal skyscrapers and Konstantin Melnikov s temporary pavilions showed the originality and ambition of this new group Melnikov would design the Soviet Pavilion at the Paris Exposition of Decorative Arts of 1925 which popularised the new style with its rooms designed by Rodchenko and its jagged mechanical form 5 Another glimpse of a Constructivist lived environment is visible in the popular science fiction film Aelita which had interiors and exteriors modelled in angular geometric fashion by Aleksandra Ekster The state run Mosselprom department store of 1924 was also an early modernist building for the new consumerism of the New Economic Policy as was the Vesnin brothers Mostorg store built three years later Modern offices for the mass press were also popular such as the Izvestia headquarters 8 This was built in 1926 7 and designed by Grigori Barkhin 9 OSA edit nbsp Barsch Sinyavsky Moscow Planetarium 1929 A colder and more technological Constructivist style was introduced by the 1923 4 glass office project by the Vesnin brothers for Leningradskaya Pravda In 1925 the OSA Group also with ties to Vkhutemas was founded by Alexander Vesnin and Moisei Ginzburg the Organisation of Contemporary Architects This group had much in common with Weimar Germany s Functionalism such as the housing projects of Ernst May 5 Housing especially collective housing in specially designed dom kommuny to replace the collectivised 19th century housing that was the norm was the main priority of this group The term social condenser was coined to describe their aims which followed from the ideas of V I Lenin who wrote in 1919 that the real emancipation of women and real communism begins with the mass struggle against these petty household chores and the true reforming of the mass into a vast socialist household nbsp Rusakov Workers Club in Moscow by Konstantin Melnikov 1927 28 Collective housing projects that were built included Ivan Nikolaev s Communal House of the Textile Institute Ordzhonikidze St Moscow 1929 1931 and Ginzburg s Moscow Gosstrakh flats and most famously his Narkomfin Building 9 Flats were built in a Constructivist idiom in Kharkiv Moscow and Leningrad and in smaller towns Ginzburg also designed a government building in Alma Ata while the Vesnin brothers designed a School of Film Actors in Moscow Ginzburg critiqued the idea of building in the new society being the same as in the old treating workers housing in the same way as they would bourgeois apartments the Constructivists however approach the same problem with maximum consideration for those shifts and changes in our everyday life our goal is the collaboration with the proletariat in creating a new way of life 10 OSA published a magazine SA or Contemporary Architecture from 1926 to 1930 The leading rationalist Ladovsky designed his own rather different kind of mass housing completing a Moscow apartment block in 1929 A particularly extravagant example is the Chekists Village in Sverdlovsk now Yekaterinburg designed by Ivan Antonov Veniamin Sokolov and Arseny Tumbasov a hammer and sickle shaped collective housing complex for staff of the People s Commissariat for the Internal Affairs NKVD which currently serves as a hotel The everyday and the utopian edit nbsp Narkomfin Building in Moscow by Moisei Ginzburg before its restoration in 2020 The building was at the top of UNESCO s Endangered Buildings list and there was an international campaign to save it nbsp Svoboda Factory Club by Melnikov Moscow The new forms of the Constructivists began to symbolise the project for a new everyday life of the Soviet Union then in the mixed economy of the New Economic Policy 11 State buildings were constructed like the huge Derzhprom complex in Kharkiv 12 designed by Serafimov Folger and Kravets 1926 1928 which was noted by Reyner Banham in his Theory and Design in the First Machine Age as being along with the Dessau Bauhaus the largest scale Modernist work of the 1920s 13 Other notable works included the aluminum parabola and glazed staircase of Mikhail Barsch and Mikhail Sinyavsky s 1929 Moscow Planetarium nbsp House of Printing 1935 in Kazan by Semen Pen The popularity of the new aesthetic led to traditionalist architects adopting Constructivism as in Ivan Zholtovsky s 1926 MOGES power station or Alexey Shchusev s Narkomzem offices both in Moscow 14 Similarly the engineer Vladimir Shukhov s Shukhov Tower was often seen as an avant garde work and was according to Walter Benjamin in his Moscow Diary unlike any similar structure in the West 15 Shukhov also collaborated with Melnikov on the Bakhmetevsky Bus Garage and Novo Ryazanskaya Street Garage 5 Many of these buildings are shown in Sergei Eisenstein s film The General Line which also featured a specially built mock up Constructivist collective farm designed by Andrey Burov A central aim of the Constructivists was instilling the avant garde in everyday life From 1927 they worked on projects for Workers Clubs communal leisure facilities usually built in factory districts Among the most famous of these are the Kauchuk Svoboda and Rusakov clubs by Konstantin Melnikov the club of the Likachev works by the Vesnin brothers and Ilya Golosov s Zuev Workers Club nbsp DniproGES 1932 by Vesnin Brothers At the same time as this foray into the everyday outlandish projects were designed such as Ivan Leonidov s Lenin Institute a high tech work that bears comparison with Buckminster Fuller This consisted of a skyscraper sized library a planetarium and dome all linked together by a monorail or Georgy Krutikov s self explanatory Flying City an ASNOVA project that was intended as a serious proposal for airborne housing The Melnikov House and his Bakhmetevsky Bus Garage are fine examples of the tensions between individualism and utilitarianism in Constructivism There were also projects for Suprematist skyscrapers called planits or architektons by Kasimir Malevich Lazar Khikeidel Cosmic Habitats 1921 1922 Architectons 1922 1927 Workers Club 1926 Communal Dwelling Kommunalnoe Zhilishe 1927 A Nikolsky and L Khidekel Moscow Cooperative Institute 1929 The fantastical element also found expression in the work of Yakov Chernikhov who produced several books of experimental designs most famously Architectural Fantasies 1933 earning him the epithet the Soviet Piranesi The Sotsgorod and town planning edit nbsp Town Hall by Noi Trotsky Leningrad 1932 1934 See also Sotsgorod Cities for Utopia Despite the ambitiousness of many Constructivist proposals for reconstructed cities there were fairly few examples of coherent Constructivist town planning However the Narvskaya Zastava district of Leningrad became a focus for Constructivism Beginning in 1925 communal housing was designed for the area by architects like A Gegello and OSA s Alexander Nikolsky as well as public buildings like the Kirov Town Hall by Noi Trotsky 1932 4 an experimental school by G A Simonov and a series of Communal laundries and kitchens designed for the area by local ASNOVA members 16 Many of the Constructivists hoped to see their ambitions realised during the Cultural Revolution that accompanied the first five year plan At this point the Constructivists were divided between urbanists and disurbanists who favoured a garden city or linear city model The Linear City was propagandised by the head of the Finance Commissariat Nikolay Milyutin in his book Sozgorod aka Sotsgorod 1930 This was taken to a more extreme level by the OSA theorist Mikhail Okhitovich His disurbanism proposed a system of one person or one family buildings connected by linear transport networks spread over a huge area that traversed the boundaries between the urban and agricultural in which it resembled a socialist equivalent of Frank Lloyd Wright s Broadacre City The disurbanists and urbanists proposed projects for new cities such as Magnitogorsk were often rejected in favour of the more pragmatic German architects fleeing Nazism such as May Brigade Ernst May Mart Stam Margarete Schutte Lihotzky the Bauhaus Brigade led by Hannes Meyer and Bruno Taut The city planning of Le Corbusier found brief favour with the architect writing a reply to Moscow that later became the Ville Radieuse plan and designing the Tsentrosoyuz government building with the Constructivist Nikolai Kolli The duplex apartments and collective facilities of the OSA group were a major influence on his later work Another famous modernist Erich Mendelsohn designed Leningrad s Red Banner Textile Factory and popularised Constructivism in his book Russland Europa Amerika A Five Year Plan project with major Constructivist input was DnieproGES designed by Victor Vesnin et al El Lissitzky also popularised the style abroad with his 1930 book The Reconstruction of Architecture in Russia The end of constructivism edit nbsp Intourist Garage by Konstantin Melnikov 1933 nbsp Political Convicts House in Saint Petersburg 1933 The 1932 competition for the Palace of the Soviets a grandiose project to rival the Empire State Building featured entries from all the major Constructivists as well as Walter Gropius Erich Mendelsohn and Le Corbusier However this coincided with widespread criticism of Modernism which was always difficult to sustain in a still mostly agrarian country There was also the critique that the style merely copied the forms of technology while using fairly routine construction methods 17 The winning entry by Boris Iofan marked the start of eclectic historicism of Stalinist Architecture a style which bears similarities to Post Modernism in that it reacted against modernist architecture s cosmopolitanism alleged ugliness and inhumanity with a pick and mix of historical styles sometimes achieved with new technology Housing projects like the Narkomfin were designed for the attempts to reform everyday life in the 1920s such as collectivisation of facilities equality of the sexes and collective raising of children all of which fell out of favour as Stalinism revived family values The styles of the old world were also revived with the Moscow Metro in particular popularising the idea of workers palaces source source source source source source source A Kuznetsov V Movchan G Movchan L Meilman All Union Electrotechnical Institute Moscow 1927 1930 video By the end of the 1920s Constructivism was the country s dominant architecture and surprisingly many buildings of this period survive Initially the reaction was towards an art decoesque Classicism that was initially inflected with Constructivist devices such as in Iofan s House on Embankment of 1929 32 For a few years some structures were designed in a composite style sometimes called Postconstructivism After this brief synthesis Neo Classical reaction was totally dominant until 1955 Rationalist buildings were still common in industrial architecture but extinct in urban projects Last isolated constructivist buildings were launched in 1933 1935 such as Panteleimon Golosov s Pravda building finished 1935 18 the Moscow Textile Institute finished 1938 or Ladovsky s rationalist vestibules for the Moscow Metro Clearly Modernist competition entries were made by the Vesnin brothers and Ivan Leonidov for the Narkomtiazhprom project in Red Square 1934 another unbuilt Stalinist edifice Traces of Constructivism can also be found in some Socialist Realist works for instance in the Futurist elevations of Iofan s ultra Stalinist 1937 Paris Pavilion which had Suprematist interiors by Nikolai Suetin Legacy editDue in part to its political commitment and its replacement by Stalinist architecture the mechanistic dynamic forms of Constructivism were not part of the calm Platonism of the International Style as it was defined by Philip Johnson and Henry Russell Hitchcock Their book included only one building from the USSR an electrical laboratory by a government team led by Nikolaev 19 During the 1960s Constructivism was rehabilitated to a certain extent and both the wilder experimental buildings of the era such as the Globus Theatre or the Tbilisi Roads Ministry Building and the unornamented Khrushchyovka apartments are in a sense a continuation of the aborted experiment although under very different conditions Outside the USSR Constructivism has often been seen as an alternative more radical modernism and its legacy can be seen in designers as diverse as Team 10 Archigram and Kenzo Tange as well as in much Brutalist work Their integration of the avant garde and everyday life has parallels with the Situationists particularly the New Babylon project of Guy Debord and Constant Nieuwenhuys High Tech architecture also owes a debt to Constructivism most obviously in Richard Rogers Lloyd s building Zaha Hadid s early projects were adaptations of Malevich s Architektons and the influence of Chernikhov is clear on her drawings Deconstructivism evokes the dynamism of Constructivism though without the social aspect as in the work of Coop Himmelb l au In the late 1970s Rem Koolhaas wrote a parable on the political trajectory of Constructivism called The Story of the Pool in which Constructivists escape from the USSR in a self powering Modernist swimming pool only to die after being criticised for much the same reasons as they were under Stalinism soon after their arrival in the USA Meanwhile many of the original Constructivist buildings are poorly preserved or in danger of imminent demolition 20 Gallery edit nbsp Collective Housing design Nikolai Ladovsky 1920 nbsp Mosselprom building David Kogan 1923 4 nbsp Novo Ryazanskaya Street Garage Melnikov 1926 nbsp Izvestia Building Moscow Grigori amp Mikhail Barkhin 1926 nbsp Svoboda Factory Club Melnikov 1927 nbsp Kauchuk Factory Club Melnikov 1927 nbsp Flats Zamoskvorechye Moscow late 1920s nbsp Melnikov House in Moscow It was at the top of UNESCO s list of Endangered Buildings There is an international campaign to save it nbsp Hotel Iset Yekaterinburg Chekists Village nbsp De Volharding mixed use building by Jan Buijs The Hague 1927 28 nbsp The Peoples Commissariat For Communication Lines Ivan Fomin 1929 nbsp Narkomfin Building apartment house Moisei Ginzburg 1930 nbsp Narkomfin Building apartment house Moisei Ginzburg 1930 nbsp Narkomfin Building before its restoration in 2020 Moisei Ginzburg 1930 nbsp MPS Building Moscow Ivan Fomin 1930s nbsp Maxim Gorky Theatre Rostov na Donu 1935 nbsp Red Carnation Factory St Petersburg Yakov Chernikhov nbsp Textile Institute Moscow 1930 8 nbsp Regional administration building 1930 1932 Novosibirsk nbsp Krasny Prospekt 11 Novosibirsk nbsp Club of Slovak Artists Bratislava Slovakia 1926 nbsp Former hospital Bezrucova by Alois Balan and Jiri Grossmann Bratislava Slovakia 1939 nbsp University of Leicester Engineering Building by James Stirling 1963 nbsp Barrio de las Flores La Coruna Galicia Spain 1960s 21 Constructivist buildings and other modernist projects in the former USSR editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2008 Learn how and when to remove this template message Moscow edit Mosselprom building 1925 by Nikolai Strukov Bakhmetevsky Bus Garage 1927 by Konstantin Melnikov and Vladimir Shukhov Kauchuk Factory Club 1929 by Konstantin Melnikov Svoboda Factory Club 1929 by Konstantin Melnikov Novo Ryazanskaya Street Garage 1929 by Konstantin Melnikov and Vladimir Shukhov Melnikov House 1929 by Konstantin Melnikov Narkomfin Building 1930 by Moisei Ginzburg and Ignaty Milinis Rusakov Workers Club 1929 by Konstantin Melnikov Zuev Workers Club 1929 by Ilya Golosov Tsentrosoyuz building 1936 by Le Corbusier and Nikolai Kolli Gosplan Garage 1936 by Konstantin Melnikov ZiL House of Culture 1937 by Vesnin brothers Leningrad Saint Petersburg edit Stadium for metal workers Red Profintern 1927 by Aleksandr Nikolsky and Lazar Khidekel Red Flag Textile Factory 1929 by Erich Mendelsohn Bolshoy Dom in Leningrad 1932 by Noi Trotsky Alexander Gegello and Andrey Ol Kirov District House of Soviets 1935 by Noi Trotsky Moscow District House of Soviets 1935 by Igor Fomin Igor Daugul and Boris Serebrovsky 1st House of Lensovet 1934 by Evgeny Levinson and Igor Fomin Club for the shipyard workers in Leningrad by Aleksandr Nikolsky and Lazar Khidekel Pumping station Vasilyeostrovskaya pumping station near the harbor in Leningrad Construction 1929 1930 by Lazar Khidekel Dubrovskiy Electro Power Station S M Kirov and Residential settlement Doubrovskaya HPP Planning and construction of the first in the Soviet Union socialist town sotsrogodok for workers and specialists 1931 1933 by Lazar Khidekel Minsk edit Government House Minsk and similar Oblispolkom in Mogilev by Iosif Langbard Kharkiv edit Derzhprom 1928 by Sergey Serafimov Samuil Kravets and Marc Folger House of Projects 1932 by Sergey Serafimov and Maria Sandberg Serafimova Post Office 1929 by Arkady Mordvinov Zaporizhzhia edit DnieproGES 1932 by Viktor Vesnin and Nikolai Kolli Sverdlovsk Ekaterinburg edit Builders Club 1929 by Yakov Kornfeld House of Printing 1930 by Vladimir Sigov Gorodok chekistov 1933 by Ivan Antonov Veniamin Sokolov and Arseny Tumbasov House of Communications 1933 by Kasyan Solomonov Kuybyshev Samara edit House of Red Army 1930 by Pyotr Scherbachov Factory kitchen 1933 by Evgenya Maksimova House of Industry 1933 by Vasily Sukhov Novosibirsk edit Prombank Dormitory 1927 by I A Burlakov Polyclinic No 1 1928 by P Shyokin Business House 1928 by D F Fridman and I A Burlakov Aeroflot House 1930s State Bank 1930 by Andrey Kryachkov Rabochaya Pyatiletka 1930 Krayispolkom Regional Administration Building 1932 by Boris Gordeev and Sergey Turgenev Soyuzzoloto House 1932 by Boris Gordeyev and A I Bobrov NKVD House Serebrennikovskaya Street 16 1932 by Ivan Voronov and Boris Gordeyev Novosibirsk Chemical Engineering Technical School 1932 by A I Bobrov Kuzbassugol Building Complex 1933 by D A Ageyev B A Bitkin and Boris Gordeyev House of Kraysnabsbyt 1934 by Boris Gordeev and Sergey Turgenev Dinamo Residential Complex 1936 by Boris Gordeyev S P Turgenev V N Nikitin NKVD House Serebrennikovskaya Street 23 1936 by Sergey Turgenev Ivan Voronov and Boris Gordeyev Non implemented projects edit Palace of the Soviets Project Tatlin s Tower project by Vladimir Tatlin Narkomtiazhprom ProjectReferences edit Constructivism Tate Modern Retrieved 9 April 2020 Hunt Ronald 1 October 1967 THE CONSTRUCTIVIST ETHOS RUSSIA 1913 1932 PART II Artforum Retrieved 24 February 2024 Lord Foster fires up campaign to save Shukhov Tower https www theguardian com world 2010 apr 15 radio tower campaign russia foster Oliver Stallybrass Alan Bullock et al 1988 The Fontana Dictionary of Modern Thought Paperback Fontana press p 918 pages ISBN 0 00 686129 6 a b c d Frampton Kenneth 2004 Modern architecture a critical history Paperback Third ed World of Art p 376 pages ISBN 0 500 20257 5 see the picture here 17 Costruttivismo Archived from the original on 15 April 2008 Retrieved 7 April 2007 Cooke Catherine 1990 Architectural Drawings of the Russian Avant Garde Hardback Harry N Abrams Inc p 143 pages ISBN 0 8109 6000 1 Izvestia Building Moscow by Grigory Barkhin galinsky com Retrieved 15 August 2015 a b S N Khan Magomedov Pioneers of Soviet Architecture 1988 quoted in Art and Revolution ed Campbell Lynton Hayward Gallery London 1971 See the discussion in Victor Buchli s An Archeology of Socialism 2000 pictures here http www kharkov ua about svobody e htm Freedom Square Kharkiv Reyner Banham Theory and Design in the First Machine Age Architectural Press 1971 p297 Narkomzem Agriculture Ministry Moscow by Aleksey Shchusev galinsky com Retrieved 15 August 2015 Benjamin Walter Moscow Diary Chto Delat What is to be Done issue on Narvskaya Zastava http www chtodelat org images pdfs Chtodelat 07 pdf permanent dead link and also St Petersburg Wandering Camera on Simonov s school http www enlight ru camera 354 index e html Catherine Cooke The Avant Garde Archive photo 17 Costruttivismo Archived from the original on 15 April 2008 Retrieved 7 April 2007 Illustrated here 17 Costruttivismo Archived from the original on 15 April 2008 Retrieved 7 April 2007 See interview with film director Isa Willinger here http awayfromallsuns de de on constructivism Archived 5 November 2013 at the Wayback Machine Reportaje Cuatro generaciones viviendo entre petalos y arquitecturas racionales Bibliography editReyner Banham Theory and Design in the First Machine Age Architectural Press 1972 Victor Buchli An Archaeology of Socialism Berg 2002 Campbell Lynton eds Art and Revolution Hayward Gallery London 1971 Catherine Cooke Architectural Drawings of the Russian Avant Garde MOMA 1990 Catherine Cooke The Avant Garde AD magazine 1988 Catherine Cooke Fantasy and Construction Iakov Chernikhov AD magazine vol 59 no 7 8 London 1989 Catherine Cooke amp Igor Kazus Soviet Architectural Competitions Phaidon 1992 Kenneth Frampton Modern Architecture a Critical Introduction Thames amp Hudson 1980 Moisei Ginzburg Style and Epoch MIT 1981 S Khan Magomedov Alexander Vesnin and Russian Constructivism Thames amp Hudson 1986 S Khan Magomedov Pioneers of Soviet Architecture Thames amp Hudson 1988 ISBN 978 0 500 34102 5 S Khan Magomedov 100 Masterpieces of Soviet Avant garde Architecture Russian Academy of Architecture M Editorial URSS 2005 S Khan Magomedov Lazar Khidekel Creators of Russian Classical Avant garde series M 2008 Rem Koolhaas The Story of the Pool 1977 included in Delirious New York Monacelli Press 1997 ISBN 978 1 885254 00 9 El Lissitzky The Reconstruction of Architecture in the Soviet Union Vienna 1930 Karl Schlogel Moscow Reaktion 2005 Karel Teige The Minimum Dwelling MIT 2002 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Constructivist architecture Constructivist architecture on YouTube Documentary on Moscow s Constructivist buildings Archived 27 September 2013 at the Wayback Machine Heritage at Risk Preservation of 20th Century Architecture and World Heritage April 2006 Conference by the Moscow Architectural Preservation Society MAPS Archive Constructivist Photos and Designs at polito it The Moscow Times Guide to Constructivist buildings Guardian article on preserving Constructivist buildings Constructivism in Architecture at Kmtspace Campaign for the Preservation of the Narkomfin Building Constructivist designs at the Russian Utopia Depository Constructivism and Postconstructivism at St Petersburg s Wandering Camera Short film on the heavily Constructivist influenced buildings that Berthold Lubetkin designed for Dudley Zoo in the 1930s on YouTube Czech Constructivism Villa Victor Kriz Commie vs Capitalist Architecture slideshow by Life magazine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Constructivist architecture amp oldid 1209996514, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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