fbpx
Wikipedia

Fyodor Schechtel

Fyodor Osipovich Schechtel (Russian: Фёдор О́сипович Ше́хтель; August 7 [O.S. July 26] 1859 – July 7, 1926) was a Russian architect, graphic artist and stage designer, the most influential and prolific master of Russian Art Nouveau and late Russian Revival architecture.

Fyodor Schechtel
Portrait, 1890s
Born(1859-08-07)August 7, 1859
DiedJuly 7, 1926(1926-07-07) (aged 66)
NationalityRussian
OccupationArchitect
PracticeOwn firm
BuildingsYaroslavsky Rail Terminal

Baptised as Franz Albert Schechtel (also transliterated as Shekhtel), he created most of his work as Franz Schechtel (Франц Шехтель), changing his name to Fyodor with the outbreak of World War I. In two decades of independent practice he completed five theaters, five churches, 39 private residences, Yaroslavsky Rail Terminal and various other buildings, primarily in Moscow. Most of his legacy survives to date.

Biography edit

Early life edit

Franz Schechtel (Russified as Fyodor Osipovich) was born to a family of ethnic German engineers in Saint Petersburg, the second of five children. His parents were Volga Germans of Saratov. His mother, born Daria Karlovna Zhegin, came from a family of Saratov merchants. Schechtel's uncle on his father's side, also named Franz Schechtel, was an established businessman in Saratov. He is credited with building the first theater in Saratov. See also a photocopy of the Schechtel family tree.

The Schechtel family relocated to Saratov in 1865 to assist the ailing Franz Sr. in business. Both brothers, Franz Sr. and Osip, died in 1867. Business debts ruined their families, forcing Daria Karlovna to seek free boarding schools for the children; she relocated to Moscow and worked for Pavel Tretyakov. Franz attended a free Roman Catholic seminary in Saratov, graduating in 1875. However, he received his high school diploma only in 1880, when he was drafted into the Russian Imperial Army (Schechtel was eventually relieved from service).

 
Rebuilding Moscow Art Theater was Schechtel's tribute to the artistic Moscow of the 1880s that shaped his talent, with contributions by Anna Golubkina and Ivan Fomin

An emerging artist edit

In 1875 Schechtel arrived in Moscow and attended architectural classes at the Moscow School of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture. He was expelled in 1878 for "bad attendance." 19-year-old Franz made his living by assisting architect Alexander Kaminsky (a relative of Pavel Tretyakov), in painting icons, church frescoes and daily illustrations for newspapers and magazines. There he met author and playwright Anton Chekhov and his brother Nikolay Chekhov. Schechtel illustrated a book for Chekhov in 1886, who then recommended Schechtel to other clients. This experience (as well as the Tretyakov connection) familiarized Franz with Moscow's artistic circles and the wealthy patrons of the arts who would become his future clients, notably the Morozov family of Old Believers.

Throughout the 1880s, Schechtel completed many theatrical stage designs; most of his graphics from this period have been lost, excluding a small fraction stored at the Bakhrushin Museum in Moscow.

 
Zinaida Morozova Palace, 1893

Early architecture edit

Schechtel obtained a construction management license in 1894. His earlier projects, completed under Kaminsky's management, are sometimes credited to Kaminsky alone. Schechtel's first own, undisputed building - Zinaida Morozova House in Spiridonovka Street, 1893, famous for Mikhail Vrubel artwork - is a mix of Gothic architecture and romanticism. In the same year he completed the interior of the Kharitonenko Mansion on Sofiiskaya Naberezhnaya. His style during the 1890s meanders between Gothic and Russian Revival. The first sign of a new, mature style (a Russian version of Art Nouveau, Russky Modern), appears in his 1899 Arshinov House in Bolshaya Ordynka Street.

Art Nouveau edit

 
Levenson Printshop, Moscow (1900)
 
Ryabushinsky House, 6, Malaya Nikitskaya, Moscow (1900)

Schechtel's turn to Art Nouveau is associated with the 1900 Levenson Printshop in Trekhprudny Lane, in Patriarshy Ponds, a well-to-do neighborhood near Moscow's center. Patriarshy Ponds is still home to many of Schechtel's works, including two of his own residences from 1896 and 1910. Schechtel designed the Printshop to have Gothic trim, but changed his plan midway through construction. His "Popov Tea House" pavilion at the Exposition Universelle (1900) in Paris earned a silver medal, exposing him to international fame (diploma).[1] At home, he was inducted as a member of the Imperial Academy of Arts in 1902 (photograph of diploma).

1899-1903 were Schechtel's most productive years. In this period, he designed (in Moscow alone, not including out-of-town commissions):

  • 1899: Arshinov House (32, Bolshaya Ordynka) and offices (5, Staropansky Lane)
  • 1900: Lutheran chapel (7, Starosadsky Lane)
  • 1900: Levenson Printshop (9, Trekhprudny Lane)
  • 1900: Ryabushinsky Mansion (6, Malaya Nikitskaya Street), now known as the Gorky Museum
  • 1901: Derozhinskaya Mansion (7, Kropotkinsky Lane)
  • 1901: "Boyarsky Dvor" hotel and offices (1, Staraya Square)
  • 1901: Kahn apartment building (35, Malaya Nikitskaya Street)
  • 1902: Yaroslavsky Rail Terminal (completed 1904), the most visible of his Moscow works
  • 1902: St.Nicholas chapel (Tverskaya-Yamskaya Street) destroyed 1930s
  • 1900-1903: Moscow Art Theatre reconstruction (facade curtain artwork)
  • 1901-1903: Smirnov House reconstruction (18, Tverskoy Boulevard)
  • 1903: Ryabushinsky Bank (Birzhevaya Square)

Unlike his rival Lev Kekushev, Schechtel never committed himself to a single style. His Yaroslavsky Terminal and Ryabushinsky House are distinct, setting two trends of Schechtel's future work: the internationalized, refined Art Nouveau and the last round of Russian Revival before the Revolution of 1917.

Mature years edit

 
Shamshin Building, Moscow, 1909

In the aftermath of the Russian Revolution of 1905 the Russian government lifted all limitations on Old Believers, and they responded by commissioning churches to be built all over the country. In 1909 Schechtel won an open contest to construct Belokrinitskoe Soglasie church in Balakovo, financed by the Balakovo-based Maltsev brothers. By this time, Schechtel (a Roman Catholic) had firmly established himself within the Old Believer community, having done previous projects for the Maltsevs. Schechtel designed an eight-faceted tented church, borrowing elements from the style of the Church of Ascension at Kolomenskoye in Moscow and older architectural traditions of the Russian North. The church, which could accommodate 1,200 worshippers, was completed in 1912, but was later destroyed during the Soviet period. It is now being rebuilt by the Russian Orthodox Church).

After 1905, Schechtel was famous for his office buildings, applying Art Nouveau concepts to steel frame structures, notably the 1907 Ryabushinsky Printshop in Putinkovsky Lane () and the 1909 Merchant's Society offices in Cherkassky Lanes (, the latter damaged by inadequate replacement of the original windows). Emphasis on the top floor ornamentation, witnessed in the Merchant Society Building, became a key feature in the so-called Rationalist Modern trend in commercial architectural design.

 
Neoclassical Chekhov Library, Taganrog, 1914

In 1909 Schechtel turned to Neoclassical Revival, building his own (third) residence on the Garden Ring in strict Doric style. He began taking more commissions outside Moscow, notably in Nizhny Novgorod, his hometown of Saratov, and Taganrog, including the neoclassical Chekhov Library in 1914. Vladimir Lenin's refuge in 1923-1924, the neoclassical Gorki Leninskiye estate (formerly Morozov property), is also Schechtel's design.

Death and legacy edit

The advent of World War I in 1914, which halted practically all new construction for a decade, brought an end to Schechtel's professional career. His last work before the revolution was a wooden tented church in the Moscow suburb of Solomennaya Storozhka, funded by the Tula Militia training camp. Schechtel modelled the church on historical Olonetz area models (excluding the integrated belfry, which was uncommon for Olonetz architecture). The church was closed in the 1930s, neglected and eventually demolished in the 1960s; a wooden replica was built in 1996-1997.[2] Schectel's only post-1917 work, a pavilion at the 1923 All-Russia Agricultural Exhibition, met a similar fate.

Shechtel cooperated with various planning and design agencies, continued teaching at Stroganov School of Arts and VKhuTEMAS, and even applied to the 1925 Lenin Mausoleum contest (Schechtel's entry), but did not build anything anymore. Construction in the USSR, halted by a decade of hostilities, resumed in 1926, the year of Schechtel's death.

In 1918, the architect was evicted from his house on Bolshaya Sadovaya and had to live with his daughter, Vera Tonkova (née Schechtel). Of Schechtel's four children, two of them — Vera Tonkova and Lev Zhegin — would become well-known artists. According to several accounts, however, Schechtel died in bitter poverty. He was interred at Vagankovo Cemetery.

Schechtel's Art Nouveau was despised by Soviet critics as rotten formalism until the Brezhnev period. At the same time, his Neo-Russian structures, such as Yaroslavsky Terminal, which matched the patriotic Soviet rhetoric quite well, were at first tolerated and later praised. Many of his Moscow mansions were leased to foreign embassies, have been well maintained and are still in good order inside and out. His public buildings, including his theaters and the Taganrog Library, also remain close to their original design externally.

Buildings edit

 
Schechtel's second own house, in Yermolayevsky Lane, 1896
 
Moscow Art Theater, main entrance, sculpture by Anna Golubkina
 
Details of 1900 Ryabushinsky House
  • 1884: Shchapov Building (58, Baumanskaya Street, Moscow) - assistant to Alexander Kaminsky. First record of Schechtel's architecture.
  • 1886: Paradise Theater (Bolshaya Nikitskaya, Moscow, now Mayakovsky Theater), with Konstantin Tersky
  • 1887: (draft) Archangel Michael chapel, Taganrog
  • 1889: Own (first) house (20, Peterburg Highway, Moscow, destroyed 1937)
  • 1889: Von Dervis estates, Ryazan Oblast gallery
  • 1889: Morozov memorial chapel (Rogozhskoye Cemetery, Moscow)
  • 1892: Morozov House (Kirzhach)
  • 1890: Lukalov country estate (Velikoye, Yaroslavl Oblast) photo 2007-09-29 at the Wayback Machine
  • 1891: Vikula Morozov country estate (Odintsovo-Arkhangeskoye, near Domodedovo) rebuilt and(or) destroyed Gates, 1900s see also[3]
  • 1893: Zinaida Morozova House (Spiridonovka Street, Moscow)
  • 1893 [Pavel Kharitonenko] House, (Sofiiskaya Naberezhnaya, Moscow)
  • 1896: Kuznetsov House (43, Prospekt Mira, Moscow)
  • 1896: Own (second) House (28, Yermolaevsky Lane, Moscow)
  • 1897: Varvara Morozova memorial chapel (Preobrazhenskoye Cemetery, Moscow)
  • 1897: (draft) People's House in Sokolniki, Moscow draft
  • 1899: Zakharyin memorial chapel (Kurkino, now Moscow)
  • 1899: Arshinov House (32, Bolshaya Ordynka, Moscow)
  • 1899: Arshinov offices (5, Staropansky Lane, Moscow)
  • 1900: Lutheran chapel (7, Starosadsky Lane, Moscow)
  • 1900: Ryabushinsky Mansion (Malaya Nikitskaya Street, Moscow)
  • 1900: Church of the Saviour, Ivanovo (Byzantine Revival style, completed 1903, destroyed 1937)
  • 1900: Maltsev House (75, Kommunisticheskaya Street, Balakovo) www.museum.ru
  • 1901: Derozhinskaya Mansion (Kropotkinsky Lane, Moscow, currently Embassy of Australia)
  • 1901: Russian Pavilion at Glasgow Exhibition
  • 1901: "Boyarsky Dvor" hotel and offices (Staraya Square, Moscow
  • 1901: Kahn apartment building (35, Malaya Nikitskaya Street, Moscow)
  • 1902: Yaroslavsky Rail Terminal (completed 1904)
  • 1902: St. Nicholas chapel (Tverskaya-Yamskaya Street, Moscow) destroyed 1930s
  • 1900-1903: Moscow Art Theatre reconstruction (facade curtain artwork)
  • 1901-1903: Smirnov House (18, Tverskoy Boulevard, reconstruction of earlier structure)
  • 1903: Ryabushinsky Bank (Birzhevaya Square, Moscow)
  • 1904: Stroganov School apartment building (24, Myasnitskaya Street, Moscow)
  • 1904?: Kharitonenko House (12, Sofiyskaya Embankment, Moscow, former Gustav List house, now Embassy of United Kingdom) with Vasily Zalessky
  • 1904?: Anton Chekhov's tomb Novodevichy Cemetery
  • 1905: Old Believers' Church house (4, Turchaninov Lane, Moscow)
  • 1906: Levenson House ("Teremok", 4, Chobotovsky Proezd, Moscow)
  • 1907: Ryabushinsky Printshop ("Utro Rossii", 3, Bolshoy Putinkovsky Lane, Moscow, completed 1909)
  • 1907: Patrikeev House (6, Pravoberezhnaya Street, Moscow, now within Hospital No.1)
  • 1908: Winter Theater (55, Krasnaya Street, Krasnodar) with Alexander Kozlov
  • 1909: Merchants' Society offices (2, Maly Cherkassky Lane, Moscow)
  • 1909: Apartment building (13, Pyatnitskaya, Moscow)
  • 1909: "Khudozhestvenny" Cinema (Arbat Square, Moscow)
  • 1909: Shamshin apartment building (8/13, Znamenka Street, Moscow)
  • 1909: Zakharyin Hospital (Kurkino, now Moscow) with Igor Grabar
  • 1909: Stroganov School Store (Rozhdestvenka Street, Moscow)
  • 1909: Own (third) house (4, Bolshaya Sadovaya Street, Moscow)
  • 1909: Zinaida Morozova (Zimina) estate, now Gorki Leninskiye, completed 1914
  • 1910: (draft) Bank Offices (Nikolskaya Street, Moscow)
  • 1911: Chekhov Library, Taganrog draft, completed 1914
  • 1911: Rukavishnikov House (39, Bolshaya Pokrovskaya Street, Nizhny Novgorod, later a concert hall) 1980s photo
  • 1912: Sharonov Mansion (80, Frunze Street, Taganrog)
  • 1911: Reyneke House (22, Sobornaya, Saratov)
  • 1913: Rukavishnikov Bank (23, Rozhdestvenskaya, Nizhny Novgorod) 1980s photo: Embankment facade Street facade
  • 1913: Mindovskaya House (9, Vspolny Lane, Moscow)
  • 1913?: Suroshnikov House (Samara) photo 2007-10-08 at the Wayback Machine
  • 1914: Erlanger crypt (Vvedenskoye cemetery, Moscow)
  • 1914: (draft) Museum in Nizhny Novgorod draft
  • 1916: St.Nicholas Church of Tula Druzhina (Solomennaya Storozhka, Moscow, destroyed 1960) interior photo The wooden tented church was rebuilt in 1996-1997:
  • 1923: Turkestan Pavilion, All-Russian Exhibition in Moscow
  • 1925: (draft) Lenin Mausoleum www.utopia.ru

See also edit

 
Schechtel's grave in Vagankovo cemetery
  • William Craft Brumfield. The Origins of Modernism in Russian Architecture (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1991) ISBN 0-520-06929-3
  • William C. Brumfield, "Fedor Shekhtel: Aesthetic Idealism in Modernist Architecture",1991 www.cdlib.org

References edit

  • This article started as an abridged translation of ru:Шехтель, Фёдор Осипович, itself based on materials from . Some material was rearranged as in V.G.Vlasov's "Lexicon of Fine Arts".[4] Contradicting, unreferenced statements were omitted. Dates, wherever possible, are referenced to drafts, not completion, as in "Architectural monuments of Moscow" ("Памятники архитектуры Москвы") academic edition.
  1. ^ Russian: Н.П.Овчинникова, архитектор (Ленинград), "Россия на Всемирной выставке 1900 года в Париже" www.nsc.ru
  2. ^ Russian: Church of St.Nicholas, official site 2012-04-18 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Russian: Cело Одинцово. Михайло-Архангельская церковь www.domod.ru 2007-07-10 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ Russian: Власов В.Г. Большой энциклопедический словарь изобразительного искусства, СПБ, 2000, online at Vlasov

fyodor, schechtel, this, name, that, follows, eastern, slavic, naming, customs, patronymic, osipovich, family, name, schechtel, fyodor, osipovich, schechtel, russian, Фёдор, сипович, Ше, хтель, august, july, 1859, july, 1926, russian, architect, graphic, artis. In this name that follows Eastern Slavic naming customs the patronymic is Osipovich and the family name is Schechtel Fyodor Osipovich Schechtel Russian Fyodor O sipovich She htel August 7 O S July 26 1859 July 7 1926 was a Russian architect graphic artist and stage designer the most influential and prolific master of Russian Art Nouveau and late Russian Revival architecture Fyodor SchechtelPortrait 1890sBorn 1859 08 07 August 7 1859Saint Petersburg Russian EmpireDiedJuly 7 1926 1926 07 07 aged 66 Moscow Soviet UnionNationalityRussianOccupationArchitectPracticeOwn firmBuildingsYaroslavsky Rail Terminal Baptised as Franz Albert Schechtel also transliterated as Shekhtel he created most of his work as Franz Schechtel Franc Shehtel changing his name to Fyodor with the outbreak of World War I In two decades of independent practice he completed five theaters five churches 39 private residences Yaroslavsky Rail Terminal and various other buildings primarily in Moscow Most of his legacy survives to date Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 An emerging artist 1 3 Early architecture 1 4 Art Nouveau 1 5 Mature years 1 6 Death and legacy 2 Buildings 3 See also 4 ReferencesBiography editEarly life edit Franz Schechtel Russified as Fyodor Osipovich was born to a family of ethnic German engineers in Saint Petersburg the second of five children His parents were Volga Germans of Saratov His mother born Daria Karlovna Zhegin came from a family of Saratov merchants Schechtel s uncle on his father s side also named Franz Schechtel was an established businessman in Saratov He is credited with building the first theater in Saratov See also a photocopy of the Schechtel family tree The Schechtel family relocated to Saratov in 1865 to assist the ailing Franz Sr in business Both brothers Franz Sr and Osip died in 1867 Business debts ruined their families forcing Daria Karlovna to seek free boarding schools for the children she relocated to Moscow and worked for Pavel Tretyakov Franz attended a free Roman Catholic seminary in Saratov graduating in 1875 However he received his high school diploma only in 1880 when he was drafted into the Russian Imperial Army Schechtel was eventually relieved from service nbsp Rebuilding Moscow Art Theater was Schechtel s tribute to the artistic Moscow of the 1880s that shaped his talent with contributions by Anna Golubkina and Ivan Fomin An emerging artist edit In 1875 Schechtel arrived in Moscow and attended architectural classes at the Moscow School of Painting Sculpture and Architecture He was expelled in 1878 for bad attendance 19 year old Franz made his living by assisting architect Alexander Kaminsky a relative of Pavel Tretyakov in painting icons church frescoes and daily illustrations for newspapers and magazines There he met author and playwright Anton Chekhov and his brother Nikolay Chekhov Schechtel illustrated a book for Chekhov in 1886 who then recommended Schechtel to other clients This experience as well as the Tretyakov connection familiarized Franz with Moscow s artistic circles and the wealthy patrons of the arts who would become his future clients notably the Morozov family of Old Believers Throughout the 1880s Schechtel completed many theatrical stage designs most of his graphics from this period have been lost excluding a small fraction stored at the Bakhrushin Museum in Moscow nbsp Zinaida Morozova Palace 1893 Early architecture edit Schechtel obtained a construction management license in 1894 His earlier projects completed under Kaminsky s management are sometimes credited to Kaminsky alone Schechtel s first own undisputed building Zinaida Morozova House in Spiridonovka Street 1893 famous for Mikhail Vrubel artwork is a mix of Gothic architecture and romanticism In the same year he completed the interior of the Kharitonenko Mansion on Sofiiskaya Naberezhnaya His style during the 1890s meanders between Gothic and Russian Revival The first sign of a new mature style a Russian version of Art Nouveau Russky Modern appears in his 1899 Arshinov House in Bolshaya Ordynka Street Art Nouveau edit nbsp Levenson Printshop Moscow 1900 nbsp Ryabushinsky House 6 Malaya Nikitskaya Moscow 1900 Schechtel s turn to Art Nouveau is associated with the 1900 Levenson Printshop in Trekhprudny Lane in Patriarshy Ponds a well to do neighborhood near Moscow s center Patriarshy Ponds is still home to many of Schechtel s works including two of his own residences from 1896 and 1910 Schechtel designed the Printshop to have Gothic trim but changed his plan midway through construction His Popov Tea House pavilion at the Exposition Universelle 1900 in Paris earned a silver medal exposing him to international fame diploma 1 At home he was inducted as a member of the Imperial Academy of Arts in 1902 photograph of diploma 1899 1903 were Schechtel s most productive years In this period he designed in Moscow alone not including out of town commissions 1899 Arshinov House 32 Bolshaya Ordynka and offices 5 Staropansky Lane 1900 Lutheran chapel 7 Starosadsky Lane 1900 Levenson Printshop 9 Trekhprudny Lane 1900 Ryabushinsky Mansion 6 Malaya Nikitskaya Street now known as the Gorky Museum 1901 Derozhinskaya Mansion 7 Kropotkinsky Lane 1901 Boyarsky Dvor hotel and offices 1 Staraya Square photographs floorplan 1901 Kahn apartment building 35 Malaya Nikitskaya Street 1902 Yaroslavsky Rail Terminal completed 1904 the most visible of his Moscow works 1902 St Nicholas chapel Tverskaya Yamskaya Street destroyed 1930s 1900 1903 Moscow Art Theatre reconstruction facade curtain artwork 1901 1903 Smirnov House reconstruction 18 Tverskoy Boulevard 1903 Ryabushinsky Bank Birzhevaya Square Unlike his rival Lev Kekushev Schechtel never committed himself to a single style His Yaroslavsky Terminal and Ryabushinsky House are distinct setting two trends of Schechtel s future work the internationalized refined Art Nouveau and the last round of Russian Revival before the Revolution of 1917 Mature years edit nbsp Shamshin Building Moscow 1909 In the aftermath of the Russian Revolution of 1905 the Russian government lifted all limitations on Old Believers and they responded by commissioning churches to be built all over the country In 1909 Schechtel won an open contest to construct Belokrinitskoe Soglasie church in Balakovo financed by the Balakovo based Maltsev brothers By this time Schechtel a Roman Catholic had firmly established himself within the Old Believer community having done previous projects for the Maltsevs Schechtel designed an eight faceted tented church borrowing elements from the style of the Church of Ascension at Kolomenskoye in Moscow and older architectural traditions of the Russian North The church which could accommodate 1 200 worshippers was completed in 1912 but was later destroyed during the Soviet period It is now being rebuilt by the Russian Orthodox Church After 1905 Schechtel was famous for his office buildings applying Art Nouveau concepts to steel frame structures notably the 1907 Ryabushinsky Printshop in Putinkovsky Lane photographs floorplan and the 1909 Merchant s Society offices in Cherkassky Lanes photograph floorplans the latter damaged by inadequate replacement of the original windows Emphasis on the top floor ornamentation witnessed in the Merchant Society Building became a key feature in the so called Rationalist Modern trend in commercial architectural design nbsp Neoclassical Chekhov Library Taganrog 1914 In 1909 Schechtel turned to Neoclassical Revival building his own third residence on the Garden Ring in strict Doric style He began taking more commissions outside Moscow notably in Nizhny Novgorod his hometown of Saratov and Taganrog including the neoclassical Chekhov Library in 1914 Vladimir Lenin s refuge in 1923 1924 the neoclassical Gorki Leninskiye estate formerly Morozov property is also Schechtel s design Death and legacy edit The advent of World War I in 1914 which halted practically all new construction for a decade brought an end to Schechtel s professional career His last work before the revolution was a wooden tented church in the Moscow suburb of Solomennaya Storozhka funded by the Tula Militia training camp Schechtel modelled the church on historical Olonetz area models excluding the integrated belfry which was uncommon for Olonetz architecture The church was closed in the 1930s neglected and eventually demolished in the 1960s a wooden replica was built in 1996 1997 2 Schectel s only post 1917 work a pavilion at the 1923 All Russia Agricultural Exhibition met a similar fate Shechtel cooperated with various planning and design agencies continued teaching at Stroganov School of Arts and VKhuTEMAS and even applied to the 1925 Lenin Mausoleum contest Schechtel s entry but did not build anything anymore Construction in the USSR halted by a decade of hostilities resumed in 1926 the year of Schechtel s death In 1918 the architect was evicted from his house on Bolshaya Sadovaya and had to live with his daughter Vera Tonkova nee Schechtel Of Schechtel s four children two of them Vera Tonkova and Lev Zhegin would become well known artists According to several accounts however Schechtel died in bitter poverty He was interred at Vagankovo Cemetery Schechtel s Art Nouveau was despised by Soviet critics as rotten formalism until the Brezhnev period At the same time his Neo Russian structures such as Yaroslavsky Terminal which matched the patriotic Soviet rhetoric quite well were at first tolerated and later praised Many of his Moscow mansions were leased to foreign embassies have been well maintained and are still in good order inside and out His public buildings including his theaters and the Taganrog Library also remain close to their original design externally Buildings edit nbsp Schechtel s second own house in Yermolayevsky Lane 1896 nbsp Moscow Art Theater main entrance sculpture by Anna Golubkina nbsp Details of 1900 Ryabushinsky House 1884 Shchapov Building 58 Baumanskaya Street Moscow assistant to Alexander Kaminsky First record of Schechtel s architecture 1886 Paradise Theater Bolshaya Nikitskaya Moscow now Mayakovsky Theater with Konstantin Tersky 1887 draft Archangel Michael chapel Taganrog 1889 Own first house 20 Peterburg Highway Moscow destroyed 1937 1889 Von Dervis estates Ryazan Oblast gallery 1889 Morozov memorial chapel Rogozhskoye Cemetery Moscow 1892 Morozov House Kirzhach 1890 Lukalov country estate Velikoye Yaroslavl Oblast photo Archived 2007 09 29 at the Wayback Machine 1891 Vikula Morozov country estate Odintsovo Arkhangeskoye near Domodedovo rebuilt and or destroyed Gates 1900s see also 3 1893 Zinaida Morozova House Spiridonovka Street Moscow 1893 Pavel Kharitonenko House Sofiiskaya Naberezhnaya Moscow 1896 Kuznetsov House 43 Prospekt Mira Moscow 1896 Own second House 28 Yermolaevsky Lane Moscow 1897 Varvara Morozova memorial chapel Preobrazhenskoye Cemetery Moscow 1897 draft People s House in Sokolniki Moscow draft 1899 Zakharyin memorial chapel Kurkino now Moscow 1899 Arshinov House 32 Bolshaya Ordynka Moscow 1899 Arshinov offices 5 Staropansky Lane Moscow 1900 Lutheran chapel 7 Starosadsky Lane Moscow 1900 Ryabushinsky Mansion Malaya Nikitskaya Street Moscow 1900 Church of the Saviour Ivanovo Byzantine Revival style completed 1903 destroyed 1937 1900 Maltsev House 75 Kommunisticheskaya Street Balakovo www museum ru 1901 Derozhinskaya Mansion Kropotkinsky Lane Moscow currently Embassy of Australia 1901 Russian Pavilion at Glasgow Exhibition 1901 Boyarsky Dvor hotel and offices Staraya Square Moscow photographs floorplan 1901 Kahn apartment building 35 Malaya Nikitskaya Street Moscow 1902 Yaroslavsky Rail Terminal completed 1904 1902 St Nicholas chapel Tverskaya Yamskaya Street Moscow destroyed 1930s 1900 1903 Moscow Art Theatre reconstruction facade curtain artwork 1901 1903 Smirnov House 18 Tverskoy Boulevard reconstruction of earlier structure 1903 Ryabushinsky Bank Birzhevaya Square Moscow 1904 Stroganov School apartment building 24 Myasnitskaya Street Moscow photographs floorplan 1904 Kharitonenko House 12 Sofiyskaya Embankment Moscow former Gustav List house now Embassy of United Kingdom with Vasily Zalessky 1904 Anton Chekhov s tomb Novodevichy Cemetery 1905 Old Believers Church house 4 Turchaninov Lane Moscow 1906 Levenson House Teremok 4 Chobotovsky Proezd Moscow 1907 Ryabushinsky Printshop Utro Rossii 3 Bolshoy Putinkovsky Lane Moscow completed 1909 photographs floorplan 1907 Patrikeev House 6 Pravoberezhnaya Street Moscow now within Hospital No 1 1908 Winter Theater 55 Krasnaya Street Krasnodar with Alexander Kozlov 1909 Merchants Society offices 2 Maly Cherkassky Lane Moscow photograph floorplans 1909 Apartment building 13 Pyatnitskaya Moscow 1909 Khudozhestvenny Cinema Arbat Square Moscow 1909 Shamshin apartment building 8 13 Znamenka Street Moscow 1909 Zakharyin Hospital Kurkino now Moscow with Igor Grabar 1909 Stroganov School Store Rozhdestvenka Street Moscow 1909 Own third house 4 Bolshaya Sadovaya Street Moscow 1909 Zinaida Morozova Zimina estate now Gorki Leninskiye completed 1914 1910 draft Bank Offices Nikolskaya Street Moscow 1911 Chekhov Library Taganrog draft completed 1914 1911 Rukavishnikov House 39 Bolshaya Pokrovskaya Street Nizhny Novgorod later a concert hall 1980s photo 1912 Sharonov Mansion 80 Frunze Street Taganrog 1911 Reyneke House 22 Sobornaya Saratov 1913 Rukavishnikov Bank 23 Rozhdestvenskaya Nizhny Novgorod 1980s photo Embankment facade Street facade 1913 Mindovskaya House 9 Vspolny Lane Moscow 1913 Suroshnikov House Samara photo Archived 2007 10 08 at the Wayback Machine 1914 Erlanger crypt Vvedenskoye cemetery Moscow 1914 draft Museum in Nizhny Novgorod draft 1916 St Nicholas Church of Tula Druzhina Solomennaya Storozhka Moscow destroyed 1960 exterior interior photo The wooden tented church was rebuilt in 1996 1997 Official site 1923 Turkestan Pavilion All Russian Exhibition in Moscow 1925 draft Lenin Mausoleum www utopia ruSee also edit nbsp Schechtel s grave in Vagankovo cemetery William Craft Brumfield The Origins of Modernism in Russian Architecture Berkeley University of California Press 1991 ISBN 0 520 06929 3 William C Brumfield Fedor Shekhtel Aesthetic Idealism in Modernist Architecture 1991 www cdlib orgReferences edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fyodor Schechtel This article started as an abridged translation of ru Shehtel Fyodor Osipovich itself based on materials from mosmodern race ru Some material was rearranged as in V G Vlasov s Lexicon of Fine Arts 4 Contradicting unreferenced statements were omitted Dates wherever possible are referenced to drafts not completion as in Architectural monuments of Moscow Pamyatniki arhitektury Moskvy academic edition Russian N P Ovchinnikova arhitektor Leningrad Rossiya na Vsemirnoj vystavke 1900 goda v Parizhe www nsc ru Russian Church of St Nicholas official site Archived 2012 04 18 at the Wayback Machine Russian Celo Odincovo Mihajlo Arhangelskaya cerkov www domod ru Archived 2007 07 10 at the Wayback Machine Russian Vlasov V G Bolshoj enciklopedicheskij slovar izobrazitelnogo iskusstva SPB 2000 online at Vlasov Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fyodor Schechtel amp oldid 1196417590, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.