The role of I. V. Stalin in the history of architecture

Authors

  • Alexander Rappaport Union of Moscow Architects; Union of Designers of Russia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.51461/projectbaikal.68.1796

Keywords:

Stalin’s Empire style, constructivism, style, warning, choice

Abstract

We have long regarded beating babies of avant-garde to be the most serious cultural crime, which threw the USSR back from the front line of architecture by 20-30 years and made them start from the beginning in 1960. If Stalin had seen a mainstream for architecture in that advanced idea and supported it, we would have had quite a different Soviet architecture today. His choice put an end to the constructivism utopia, according to which architecture would become a technical means of life organization. Ginzburg’s constructivism of the 1920s was a clear program of the common style and environmental standard, which could make an oppressive impression in the hands of third-rate doers. Unrealized opportunities of constructivism now don’t look so desirable. The paradoxicality of choosing academism and Stalin’s Empire style has probably another logic, a logic of reflexive frauds and false pretenses. However, if constructivism had remained as a general line for about 30 years, we would have had a kind of culture resembling Orwell more than anything else.

How to Cite

Rappaport, A. (2021). The role of I. V. Stalin in the history of architecture. Project Baikal, 18(68), 23–25. https://doi.org/10.51461/projectbaikal.68.1796

Published

2021-08-08

Issue

Section

refereed articles

References

Khmelnitsky, D. S. (2007). Zodchii Stalin [Architect Stalin]. Moscow: Novoe literaturnoe obozrenie.

Sidorina, E. V. (2012). Konstruktivism bez beregov. Issledovaniya i etyudy o russkom avangarde [Boundless constructivism. Studies and

sketches on Russian avant-garde]. Moscow: Progress-Traditsiya.