Vbulletin Russian architecture of the 18th century. 18th century architecture in Russia
Architecture of Russia of the 18th century (except Moscow), projects of residential and public buildings
The 18th century is very significant in Russian architecture. In it, three directions can be distinguished, which gradually replace each other, this and classicism. During this period of time, many new cities appeared, new buildings that are recognized as historical monuments and which can still be seen today.
Painting “View of St. Petersburg on the day of celebration of the city’s 100th anniversary” Benjamin Paterson. Canvas, oil. 66.5x100 cm. Sweden. Around 1803
The main construction takes place in St. Petersburg. It was connected with the beginning Northern War against Sweden, which began in order to liberate the Neva Banks. Many military structures were built then, and the main one was the Peter and Paul Fortress. Closer to the south, facing the fortress, they built the Admiralty - a shipbuilding shipyard-fortress, not only engineers worked on their creation, but also Peter the Great himself. At first, settlements were built as peasant huts and city mansions were rarely painted to resemble bricks. To better understand what it looked like, you can look at the log house of Peter the Great on the Neva.
The Peter and Paul Cathedral was built in 1712-1733 (architect Domenico Trezzini) on the site of the wooden church of the same name (1703-1704)..
Wooden Peter and Paul Cathedral, antique carving
Although people were forced to move to St. Petersburg, construction still proceeded very slowly. Then the architects were given special tasks: the city had to become modern, and not only be architecturally designed, but also be comfortable in its layout.
The 18th century began with great transformations, the culprit of which was Peter the Great. During this time, socio-economic and architectural changes occurred in many Russian cities. At this time, industry began to actively develop, workers' settlements and public buildings appeared. Until this time, special attention was paid to churches and royal residences, but now more attention is paid to the appearance of ordinary buildings, theaters, embankments, schools and hospitals. They forgot about wood as a building material and replaced it with brick. To begin with, this material was used only in the capital, and in other cities of Russia neither brick nor stone was visible.
Peter the Great founded a special commission, which will now be involved in designing not only the capital, but also all major cities. Church construction is moving aside, leaving space for civil buildings. Now the main emphasis is not on the appearance of houses, but on the general appearance of the city, houses stretch along the streets with uniform facades, buildings are made less dense in order to protect against the danger of fires, for aesthetic purposes, street roads are equipped with lanterns, streets are landscaped. All this was clearly influenced by the west and Perth the First, which issued many decrees regarding urban planning, which reached the scale of revolution. In a short period of time, Russia has come close to Europe in terms of urban development.
The main event in the history of architecture is the construction of St. Petersburg. After this, other cities actively began to change, Peter the Great invited architects from the West, and Russian masters went to Europe for internships.
After some time, architects from a variety of schools gathered in the capital; new buildings combined Russian traditions, Italian, Dutch, French and so on. Also, the architecture of St. Petersburg becomes special thanks to the use of new building materials; the houses were either brick or mud hut, the plaster was used in two colors: red (brown) and white.
In 1710, by decree of Peter the Great, the development of the Gulf of Finland began, and famous palace and park ensembles appeared in Peterhof. In 1725, the two-story Nagorny Palace appeared, later it was rebuilt and expanded, the work was supervised by Rastrelli himself. At the same time, a small palace was built for Peter on the shore of the bay; it consisted of a state hall and several other rooms; it was the Monplaisir Palace.
Peterhof - view of the park from the palace, 1907, old postcard
Visitors Rastrelli, Schedel, Leblon, Trezzini and others promise to make a great contribution to architecture. It is worth noting that when they just started creating in Russia, they clearly followed their previous experience, creating according to the European analogue, but after some time, they were influenced by Russian culture and this greatly affected their work.
The first third of the 18th century was marked as the Baroque period. The buildings of this time were distinguished by a combination of the incongruous, contrast and pomp, reality and illusion. In 1703-1704 In St. Petersburg, construction began on the Peter and Paul Fortress and the Admiralty. Peter had high hopes for the architects and monitors the execution of the work very strictly. The resulting style with luxurious palaces, churches, museums and theaters was called Russian Baroque (Baroque of the Peter the Great).
Panoramic view of the Spit of Vasilyevsky Island in St. Petersburg, made by J. A. Atkinson in the period 1805-1807. Signature (English, French): "Sheet 4. Exchange and warehouse. New exchange. Fortress of St. Peter and St. Paul."
During this time, the Peter and Paul Palace, the Summer Palace, the Kunstkamera, the building of the Twelve Colleges, and the Menshikov Palace were built. A large number of churches appeared in Moscow, all of them were decorated with Baroque elements. The Peter and Paul Cathedral in Kazan became quite an important object at that time.
By the middle of the 18th century, Russia lost Peter the Great, this was a great loss for the state and for all people, but as for urban planning and architecture, there were no significant changes after his departure. The country had very strong masters, because many of them were trained abroad, the most famous and in demand at that time were Blank, Michurin, Usov, Zemtsov, etc. Buildings in the Rococo style began to appear, that is, combining Baroque and Classicism at the same time. Buildings become more confident and elegant. Rococo manifests itself not only in external details, but also in the interior. Outside, as well as inside, the buildings are pompous, but at the same time strict.
At this time, Elizabeth, the daughter of Peter, had just begun to rule, and she assigned a lot of work to Rastrelli the younger. He grew up in the conditions of Russian culture, and therefore his works noted brilliance and luxury along with the Russian character. Together with Kvasov, Chevakinsky and Ukhtomsky, they created monuments of Russian architecture. Rastrelli created dome compositions throughout Russia, and was not limited to Moscow or St. Petersburg; they increasingly replaced spire-shaped details. Russian history no longer remembers anything like such chic and bulky Russian ensembles. But, despite the large number of Rastrelli fans, his style quickly gave way to the next one - classicism. During this period, the plan of St. Petersburg completely changed and Moscow was redeveloped.
The last third of the 18th century was occupied by a new direction in architecture - Russian classicism. By the end of the century, classicism had become a stable movement in art. It is characterized by strict forms with antique elements, the absence of unnecessary details, luxury, and rational designs. Most of these buildings can be seen in Moscow, but this does not mean that they were not there in other cities. The most striking examples for Moscow were the Razumovsky Palace, the Golitsyn House, the Tsaritsyn Complex, the Senate building and the Pashkov House. In St. Petersburg, it is worth noting the Academy of Sciences, the Hermitage Theater, the Hermitage itself, the Marble Palace, the Tauride Palace. The most famous architects of that time were Ukhtomsky, Bazhenov and Kazakov.
The Marble Palace was built in 1768-1785 according to the design of the architect Antonio Rinaldi in the classicism style, commissioned by Empress Catherine for her favorite Count G. G. Orlov. The Marble Palace is the first building in St. Petersburg whose facades are lined with natural stone. Lithograph by Joseph Charlemagne (1782-1861)
Classicism is a style that develops by borrowing forms, patterns and compositions from the ancient world and the Italian Renaissance. Buildings appear with regular shapes and areas, logical, symmetrical, rational, there is rigor and harmony in everything, the order tectonic system is actively used. Many customers could not afford any more Baroque houses, now came the period of peasants and merchants with less economic opportunity.
Thanks to the economic and social situation in the country, domestic and foreign markets began to actively develop, allowing for the expansion of industrial and handicraft industries. There was a need for government and private buildings: chambers of commerce, guest houses, markets, fairs, warehouses. Unique buildings for that period also appeared: banks and exchanges.
Public buildings began to appear in all cities: schools, gymnasiums, institutes, hospitals, prisons, barracks, boarding houses and libraries. The cities grew rapidly, so there was no more funding for Baroque houses and there were not enough craftsmen for this.
In 1762, a commission was founded on issues of stone construction in St. Petersburg and Moscow. It was created to regulate and supervise urban planning. The commission existed until 1796, it included Kvasov, Starov, Lem and other great architects. The main factors were land and water highways, borders between cities, trading floors and administrative buildings. The city had a clear rectangular layout. The height of the streets had clear restrictions, there were patterns that had to be followed, and houses had to be located at a minimum distance from each other. Architectural solutions were enlivened by figured window frames.
IN provincial cities In Russia, buildings were not built higher than 1-2 floors, while in St. Petersburg one could see 3- and 4-story buildings. Kvasov developed a project according to which the territory of the Fontanka embankment was improved; it soon turned into an arc-forming highway.
The most striking example of classicism can be called “Pleasure Houses” in Oranienbaum; now it no longer exists, so it can only be seen on the pages of books and textbooks. Kokorin worked on this building, and Vista at that time built the Botny House in the Peter and Paul Fortress.
As for provincial cities, the art of the 18th century left its mark most on Tsarskoye Selo, Yaroslavl, Kostroma, Nizhny Novgorod, Arkhangelsk, Odoev Bogoroditsky, etc. After this period, Petrozavodsk, Yekaterinburg, Taganrog, etc. began to actively develop, they are large attention was paid to industry and the economy of the entire state.
On this topic:
“Architecture of Russia in the 18th century” - “Tsentrnauchfilm” (00:26:26 color) Director - A. Tsineman
RUSSIAN ARCHITECTS of the XVIII-XX centuries. (Biographical information)
(1733-1768)
From the serf family of Count Sheremetev, which produced several talented representatives of Russian art. Son of a palace manager. Apprentice and later assistant. He participated in the construction of the St. Petersburg Sheremetev estate on the Fontanka (the so-called Fountain House). From the mid-1750s. until 1767 he worked on the Sheremetev estate Kuskovo, created a park and park pavilions, most of them have not survived.
The son of a village priest. Initially he studied in the “team”, then at Moscow University. From 1755 in St. Petersburg he was a student and assistant during the construction of St. Nicholas Cathedral. He studied at the Academy of Arts from its founding. After graduating from the Academy, he was sent as a pensioner to France and Italy for further education. He studied at the Paris Academy with C. de Wailly. Lived and worked in Italy. He held the title of professor at the Roman Academy and member of the academies in Florence and Bologna. In 1765 he returned to St. Petersburg. He took part in the competition for the Ekateringof project, for which he received the title of academician. He served as an architect for the artillery department. In 1767 he was sent to Moscow to put the buildings in the Kremlin in order.
The grandiose project of the Grand Kremlin Palace created by him was not implemented, but had a huge influence on the formation of classicist principles of urban planning in Russia. During the work in the Kremlin, a school of young classicist architects (,) developed around Bazhenov, who developed in their future independent work Bazhenov's ideas.
With another grandiose work - the palace complex in Tsaritsyn - the architect also failed. Built in fantastic Russian-Gothic forms, Catherine II did not like the palace and was not finished, and Bazhenov himself fell out of favor. Upon the accession of Paul I, with whom Bazhenov was associated with Masonic activities, the architect was invited to St. Petersburg and appointed vice-president of the Academy of Arts with the rank of state councilor. However, Bazhenov’s latest project, Mikhailovsky Castle, was completely redesigned by V. Brenna.
The founder and passionate promoter of classicism in Russia, a master with a bright personality and a tragic creative fate.
He is known for his works in the field of architectural theory, most of which were created jointly with F. Karzhavin. The graphic heritage of the master is very large, but the question of his authorship in many cases remains open.
Main works: in Moscow - the Pashkov estate, the houses of Yushkov and Prozorovsky, the refectory and bell tower of the Church of the Sorrowful Mother of God; Tsaritsyno palace complex near Moscow, churches in the village. Bykovo near Moscow and in the village. Znamenka (Tambov province); in St. Petersburg until the middle of the 20th century. The guardhouse of the Mikhailovsky Castle and the building of the District Court on Liteiny Prospect were attributed to him (not preserved).
(I860-between 1918 and 1923)
Born in Odessa. He received his education at the Chisinau gymnasium. In 1885 he graduated from the Institute of Civil Engineers. He worked as an assistant for the Construction Committee of the Ministry of Internal Affairs and the Main Palace Administration. He carried out private orders, mainly for the Eliseev family. Designed for St. Petersburg, Moscow, Nizhny Novgorod, Revel. Representative of modernity. Baranovsky’s publishing activity is of great importance: he compiled the multi-volume “Architectural Encyclopedia of the Second half of the 19th century century." Published the magazine "Builder". He published an “Anniversary collection on the activities of former students of the Institute of Civil Engineers.”
One of the most talented and prolific representatives of eclecticism, he worked mainly in the Renaissance style.
Main works: the mansions of Buturlina, Kochubey, Pashkov (later the Department of Appanages) in St. Petersburg, palace and park ensembles in Mikhailovka and Znamenka in the vicinity of the city; project of the reform church on the Moika in St. Petersburg (built by D. Grimm, rebuilt in the 20th century); Orthodox churches in Helsingfors and Dresden.
Brenna Vincenzo (Vikenty Frantsevich) (1747-1820)
An Italian in Russian service. Born in Florence. In 1766-1768 Studied drawing and painting in Rome with Pozzi, then architecture in Paris. He was engaged in excavations and research of ancient monuments in Rome. Published an album of antique cameos. In 1776 he met the Polish magnate S. Potocki and carried out his orders as a decorator, first in Rome, and from 1780 in Poland. In 1772, he met Tsarevich Pavel Petrovich, who was traveling around Europe, and at his invitation, he came to Russia in 1783. Initially he worked in Pavlovsk as a decorator, and from 1789 as an architect. After Paul I's accession to the throne, he became a court architect with the rank of state councilor. Favorite Architect
Paul, participated in all its constructions. After the murder of Paul in 1802, he left for Saxony. Died in Dresden.
Brenna wears romantic character. His buildings are completely individual. The architect paid great attention to the interiors. As Paul's favorite, Brenna shared the fate of most people associated with his name, and was almost forgotten in the 19th century. Only in the 20th century. Brenna's name took a place among the largest architects of Russia. He was among Brenna's students and assistants.
Main works: reconstruction and interior decoration of the Pavlovsk Palace and park layout; reconstruction and interior decoration of the Gatchina Palace and layout of the park with the construction of pavilions; obelisk “Rumyantsev to Victories”, Mikhailovsky Castle with pavilions and the layout of the adjacent part of the city.
(1798-1877)
Born in St. Petersburg in the family of a professor at the Academy of Arts and sculptor. From 1810 to 1820 studied at the Academy with the Mikhailov brothers. After graduating from the Academy, he worked on the commission for the construction of St. Isaac's Cathedral. He painted architectural landscapes for publications of the Society for the Encouragement of the Arts. In 1822, together with his brother, a painter, he was sent by the Society as a pensioner to Italy. In 1826-1829 lived in Paris, where he published his measurements of ancient baths. In 1829 he returned to Russia. From 1830 he was an academician, and from 1832 until the end of his life he was a professor at the Academy of Arts in the class of architecture.
One of the leading masters of early eclecticism; worked in different styles, with a constant sense of proportion and good taste. A prominent teacher, one of the participants in the reform of the Academy of Arts carried out. An outstanding painter, master of watercolor portraits.
Main works: in St. Petersburg - the Mikhailovsky Theater (rebuilt by A. Kavos), the Lutheran Church of St. Peter and Paul on Nevsky Prospect, the building of the Headquarters of the Guards Corps on Palace Square, reconstruction and interiors of the Marble Palace and the service building with it, restoration The Winter Palace after the fire of 1837, the Pulkovo Observatory, the church in Pargolovo, buildings on Samoilova’s estate “Count Slavyanka”, the church-mausoleum on the Wittgenstein estate in Druzhnoselye.
(1801 -1885)
Born in Moscow into the family of a carpenter. In 1816 he was apprenticed to D. Gilardi. Participated in all its constructions. On the recommendation of Gilardi, he was allowed to apply for the title of academician, receiving it in 1830. From 1828 he worked at the Moscow School of Architecture, and from 1836 he was its director. In 1834, he was appointed as an official of special assignments under the Moscow Governor-General and actually became the chief architect of Moscow, replacing him. In 1838-1839 traveled abroad. One of the founders of the art class, which was later transformed into the Moscow
School of painting, sculpture and architecture. Founder and first chairman (1869) of Moscow architectural society. In 1880 he retired from design and social activities. Died in Moscow.
Possessing modest talent, Bykovsky was a passionate and consistent reformer in architecture. Seeing that classicism had outlived its usefulness, he sought to create a new style, calling for the use of the architectural heritage of all times and peoples, thereby promoting the spread of eclecticism.
Main works: Marfino estate near Moscow; in Moscow Golitsynsky passage, the Moscow Exchange building (does not exist), the Loris-Melikov house in Milyutinsky lane. and gr. Sheremetev on Vozdvizhenka, Gorikhvostovsky and Khamovnichesky hospice houses, Trinity Church on Pokrovka, Ivanovsky Monastery, bell towers of the Strastnoy and Nikolsky monasteries; the Vonlyarlyarsky house in St. Petersburg near the Nikolaevsky Bridge.
Valen- (1729-1800)
Frenchman in Russian service. Nephew and student of the famous architect. Studied in Paris. In 1750-1752 lived in Italy. In 1759, Count was invited. to Russia for the position of professor of architecture at the newly founded Academy of Arts. He worked a lot and fruitfully in St. Petersburg (alone and with). He also worked in Moscow and on an estate in Pecher. In 1766-1767 went to France for treatment. Upon returning to Russia, he did little building and was mainly engaged in teaching at the Academy of Arts. In 1775 he retired and left for his homeland.
A brilliant representative of early classicism, skillfully combining the large scale of structures with the subtlety of elaboration and proportionality of details.
Main works: in St. Petersburg - the Academy of Arts (apparently, only the main facade on the Neva), the warehouses of the ship's timber "New Holland" (the facade, the building itself was built by Chevakinsky), the Church of St. Catherine on Nevsky Prospect, the Small Hermitage (the so-called Lamott pavilion, built on), Gostiny Dvor (completed after Rinaldi), Count Chernyshev's palace on the Moika (on the site of the Mariinsky Palace), church and palace in Pochep (Bryansk region).
(1759-1814)
From the count's serf family (according to some assumptions, his illegitimate son). Initially he studied with the icon painter G. Yushkov in the icon painting workshop of the Tyskorsky Monastery. In 1777 he was transferred to Moscow, where he worked for. From 1779 he lived in St. Petersburg in the Stroganovs' house. In 1781, together with Pavel Stroganov and his tutor Romm, he traveled around Russia. In 1785 he received his freedom. Since 1786, he has lived abroad with Stroganov and Romm in Switzerland and France. In 1790 he returned to Russia and worked for. In 1794 he was “appointed” to the Academy of Arts. From 1797 he held the rank of academician of perspective painting, and from 1800 he taught at the Academy. Since 1803 - professor. A brilliant representative of classicism. Having won the competition for the design of the Kazan Cathedral, he created an ingenious structure, unparalleled in taste, proportionality, grace and grandeur. Main works in St. Petersburg and the surrounding area: reconstruction of the interiors of the Stroganov Palace, the Stroganovs' dacha in Novaya Derevnya (not preserved), the Kazan Cathedral and the lattice enclosing the square in front of it, the Mining Institute, the interiors of the Pavlovsk Palace, the Pink Pavilion in Pavlovsk, the fountain on Pulkovo Mountain.
(1834-1873)
Born in St. Petersburg. He was brought up in the Corps of Pages. In 1852 he entered the Academy of Arts, from which he graduated in 1861 with a gold medal. He improved his skills in construction under P. Gemilian. In 1863-1868. I was on a retirement trip abroad. Visited Germany, France and Italy. I was in Paris during the World Exhibition. Upon returning to St. Petersburg, he participated in the construction of the All-Russian Manufacturing Exhibition in Solyanoy Gorodok. From 1871 he worked in Moscow. He designed a lot for S. Mamontov.
Despite his short life and few buildings (most of which have not survived), Hartmann occupies a special place in the history of Russian architecture. He is undoubtedly a talented man, an excellent draftsman, he became notorious for embodying pseudo-Russian (“leavened”) ideas in architecture (he wrote an apologetic article about him).
Geste William (Vasily Ivanovich) (1763-1832)
A Scot in Russian service. He was the city architect of Tsarskoye Selo. In 1808 he drew up its master plan. Since 1810, he actually headed all urban planning in Russia. Under his leadership, master plans for the development of Moscow, Kyiv, Vilno, Smolensk, Vyatka, Ekaterinoslav, Saratov, Penza, Krasnoyarsk, Shlisselburg, Tomsk, Ufa, and Zhitomir were drawn up. He was one of the first to start working on a basis drawn up by local land surveyors.
(1808- 1862)
Born in the city of Patashov, Nizhny Novgorod province, into the family of a plant manager. From 1823 he served as an official in Nizhny Novgorod, and from 1826 in St. Petersburg. In 1827 he retired and was engaged in artistic crafts (painting signs and labels). He collaborated in Svinin’s publications and traveled with him to Northern and Central Russia, sketching monuments of ancient architecture. Then he studied with Gilardi in Moscow, and from 1829 he worked on the construction of the Mikhailovsky Theater in St. Petersburg. From 1834 to 1837 he traveled at his own expense in Germany, Italy and Switzerland. Since 1838 - academician. Participated in the restoration of the Winter Palace after the fire. From 1843 until the end of his life - architect of the Ministry of Internal Affairs. In 1845-1847 - architect of the Chapter of Russian Orders. Professor at the Academy of Arts in the class of perspective. Died in St. Petersburg.
An architect who enjoyed enormous popularity during his lifetime as the founder of the “Russian style” of the second half of the 19th century.
Main works: a number of buildings of the Valaam Monastery of the Transfiguration of the Savior (churches, hotel, Waterworks House, etc.); church, chapels and cells of the Trinity-Sergius Hermitage; in St. Petersburg - a number of residential buildings, the courtyard of the Trinity-Sergius Hermitage on the Fontanka (rebuilt); tomb of Prince Pozharsky in Suzdal; churches and cathedrals in Staraya Ladoga, Helsingfors, Suzdal, Nice.
(1782-1868)
From the landowner's serfs. In 1804 he received “freedom” and was apprenticed to the family in whose family he was brought up. Then he studied at school during the expedition of the Kremlin building with F. Camporesi. Together with D. Gilardi, he was involved in the restoration of Moscow after the fire of 1812. From 1808 until the end of his life, he was an architect in the department of the Moscow Orphanage.
A representative of classicism, influenced by the work of G. Quarenghi, at the end of his life he paid tribute to eclecticism.
The main buildings, except those completed jointly with D. Gilardi: the houses of Lopukhin and Khrushchev-Seleznev on Prechistenka; Trinity Church in the Olsufievs' Ershovo estate near Moscow (not preserved), churches at the Vagankovskoye and Pyatnitskoye cemeteries (presumably).
(1823-1898)
Born in St. Petersburg. He studied at school at the Reformed Church of St. Peter. In 1842-1846. studied at the Academy of Arts. In 1849 he studied the architectural monuments of Transcaucasia, from where in 1852 he went on a retirement trip to Europe through Constantinople and Greece. In 1855 he returned to St. Petersburg. Since 1855 - professor at the Academy of Arts and rector of the architectural department. He also taught at the Institute of Civil Engineers; member of the Military Engineering Committee, chief architect of the imperial court. and grandson German Germanovich - famous architects, theorists and historians of architecture.
A major specialist in Byzantine architecture and the architecture of the Transcaucasian Middle Ages. He built mainly in St. Petersburg, as well as in Tiflis, Chersonesos, Nice, Copenhagen, Lugano, Geneva.
(1762-1823)
Serf, son of the gardener Prince. Trubetskoy, in whose house he received a first-class education. Apparently, he then studied at the art school of the Artillery and Engineering Cadet Corps. From 1782 he taught a course in civil architecture in the same building. In 1784 he received "freedom", in 1790 - the title of architect. Since 1785 - academician of architecture. In 1796 he was transferred to the Engineering Department, and in 1798 to the Artillery Department. He worked as an architect and military engineer.
Since 1812, due to deteriorating vision, he went to work as the head of the archive of the Artillery Department. Since 1814 - professor at the Academy of Arts. In 1816, having become completely blind, Demertsov retired.
The main works in St. Petersburg: the building of the Engineering (then the second) cadet corps on Vasilyevsky Island, the complex of barracks of the Semenovsky and Izmailovsky regiments (together with), the barracks of the Preobrazhensky regiment, the Church of St. Sergius the Wonderworker on the corner of Liteiny Prospect and st. Tchaikovsky and the Church of the Sign of the Lord opposite the Moscow Station (both have not survived).
(1766-1815)
Born and lived in Moscow. In 1733 he entered the architectural school during the expedition of the Kremlin structure to, and two years later to. In 1787 he became Kazakov’s assistant on the expedition of the Kremlin structure. From 1804 he led the school during the expedition of the Kremlin building, and from 1814 he was the director of the Kremlin drawing room.
Main works: Military hospital in Lefortovo, main house in the Lyublino estate near Moscow, the building of the Armory Museum in the Kremlin (not preserved), management of the construction of Gostiny Dvor (designed by Quarenghi), St. Nicholas Church in the village. Tsarevo near Moscow.
(around 1698-1740)
From noble children. Sent by Peter I to study in Italy. From 1716 to 1723 he studied with Seb. Cipriani and Fr. Borromini. Upon his return, he took part in a competition to design a palace in Preobrazhenskoye near Moscow. Eropkin's project was accepted and implemented (with modifications). In 1737, he was the chief architect of the “Commission on St. Petersburg Construction” with the rank of Hoffintendent and Colonel. Head of the first real master plan of St. Petersburg. He was engaged in draining the city's territory and strengthening its embankments. Together with him, he compiled the first Russian architectural and construction treatise, “The Position of an Architectural Expedition.” Translated individual chapters of A. Palladio’s treatise “Four Books on Architecture”. He spoke out with a group of cabinet secretaries against the “Bironovism” and was executed.
Eropkin's buildings have not survived. Bruce's estate house in Glinki near Moscow is attributed to him.
(1799-1851)
Born in the Kursk province into the family of a landowner. From 1806 to 1821 he studied painting at the Academy of Arts, and architecture for the last six years. He graduated with a gold medal, taught at the Academy and was engaged in excavations in Kyiv. From 1827 he lived as a pensioner in Rome. In 1835 he traveled through Greece and Asia Minor and visited Constantinople. In 1840 he returned to St. Petersburg. From 1840 - academician, from 1842 - honorary free member of the Academy (honorary academician), from 1844 - professor of the Academy. Architect of the "Cabinet of His Imperial Majesty."
A typical representative of early eclecticism. One of the most educated Russian architects. Great chart.
Main works: construction together with the New Hermitage according to the design of Leo von Klenze, the building of the Ministry of State Property on St. Isaac's Highway, the City Duma on the Duma line opposite Gostiny Dvor, St. George's Hall in the Winter Palace. Most of the church buildings built by Efimov have not survived.
Gilardi (Gilardi) Domenico (Dementy Ivanovich) (1785-1845)
Italian from Switzerland. One of the brightest and most prolific masters of the Moscow Empire style. Eight architects and stone masons from the Gilardi family worked in Moscow. - son of the architect I. "D. Gilardi; born in Montagnola. From 1796 he lived in Moscow, from 1799 - in St. Petersburg, studied painting at the Academy of Arts in Skopje. In 1803 he left for Italy, where in 1806 . graduated from the Milan Academy. Studied architectural monuments in Italy. In 1810 he returned to Moscow. He built a lot in Moscow and estates near Moscow. The heyday of Gilardi’s activity is associated with the restoration of Moscow after the fire of 1812. In 1835 he left for Italy. He died in Milan .
The main work is the restoration of the university after the fire, the building of the Board of Trustees on Solyanka, the Khrushchev House on Prechistenka, the Widow's House on Kudrin, the Catherine School on Ekaterininskaya Square. (all together with), the Usachev Naydenov estate on Zemlyanoy Val, the Lunin house on Suvorovsky Boulevard, the Gagarin house on Povarskaya Street, the Horse Yard complex in the estate of Prince. Golitsyna Kuzminki.
(1867-1959)
Born in Pinsk (Belarus). In 1887-1898 Studied at the Academy of Arts in the studio, during these same years he worked a lot as an assistant to an architect on construction sites. From 1900 he taught at the Stroganov School in Moscow. He repeatedly traveled to Italy, where he studied Renaissance architecture, and to England. He was engaged in research of Russian architecture. In his work he consistently implemented the theory of architectural harmony he created.
A major architect, an outstanding researcher of classical architecture, a theorist, an exceptionally talented teacher, who created a school of followers of the idea of mastering the classical heritage in modern architecture. His main activities date back to the post-revolutionary era.
Main works before the revolution: the house of the Racing Society, Tarasov's mansion on Spiridonovka, Nosov's mansion on Vvedenskaya Square in Moscow.
(1821-1891)
Born in Kursk province. In 1842 he graduated from the Institute of the Corps of Railway Engineers. Conducted research and design of the Nikolaev railway. Author of many works on structural mechanics. He studied the theory and calculation of lattice structures.
Since 1877 - Director of the Railway Department of the Ministry of Railways, head of the technical inspection committee that oversaw engineering design: Participant in a number of international congresses. Laureate of the Demidov Prize. Acting State Councilor, a leading engineer, the founder of the national school of bridge construction, who influenced the introduction of new structures into architecture.
Main works: reconstruction of the spire of the Peter and Paul Cathedral in St. Petersburg (in metal structures); all bridges on the Nikolaevskaya railway, including the famous Verebiya bridge, the bridge across the Oka on the Moscow-Kursk railway; reconstruction of the Mariinsky system waterway.
(? - 1727)
Arrived in Moscow, apparently from Ukraine. There is no information about his studies and early work. He had a workshop that did wood carving. Since 1707 - superintendent of all Russian church painting. The first representative of the Baroque in Russia. Zarudny's workshop owns a number of iconostases in the forms of “southern baroque”, of which the most famous is the iconostasis of the Peter and Paul Cathedral in St. Petersburg.
In Moscow, only one work by Zarudny is reliable - the Church of the Archangel Gabriel on Chistye Prudy, the so-called “Menshnkov Tower”; he is credited with a number of works similar in style to the Menshikov Tower: the Church of Peter and Paul on Novobasmannaya Street, the Church of John the Warrior on Yakimanka, the chambers of clerk Averky Kirillov on Bersenevskaya Embankment.
Zakharov Andreyan Dmitrievich (1761-1811)
Born in St. Petersburg in the family of an officer. In 1767 he was assigned to study at the art school at the Academy of Arts. In 1776 he transferred to the architectural class. Apparently he studied with. In 1782 he graduated from the Academy with a large gold medal and was sent as a pensioner to Paris, where he studied with. Zakharov was greatly influenced by creativity. In 1786 he returned to St. Petersburg and taught at the Academy of Arts until the end of his life. Associate professor. He was the largest construction authority in Russia; most projects in the capitals and provinces went through his expertise. As the chief architect of the Admiralty Department, he created planning solutions for a number of districts of St. Petersburg. He went down in history as the creator of the Admiralty (third) - a wonderful monument of classicist architecture. Apart from the Admiralty and the House of the Civil Governor in Chernigov, Zakharov’s works have not survived. The main ones are: St. Andrew's Cathedral in Kronstadt; construction of Galernaya Harbor (not completed), Proviantsky Island and the territory of the naval hospital on the Vyborg side in St. Petersburg.
(1688-1743)
Born in Moscow. He studied at the Armory Chamber. In St. Petersburg since 1709; studied Italian language at the provincial office. Since 1710, by order of Peter I, he was appointed assistant and student of D. Trezzini. Since 1719, he supervised the development of Moscow in connection with the lifting of the ban on building stone structures. In 1720 he was transferred from student to Gezel. In 1720-1722 worked in Reval as an assistant to N. Michetti on the construction of Ekaterinenthal (Kadriorg). In 1723 he went on a business trip to Stockholm. From 1723 he worked in St. Petersburg on orders from the court. In 1724 he received the title of architect. After the execution of P. Eropkin in 1740, he was seconded to the “Commission on St. Petersburg Buildings” to edit and complete the treatise “The Position of the Architectural Expedition”, in which he apparently wrote the chapters: “On architecture and architects”, “What to do with buildings ", "About the positions of various artistic craftsmen working in buildings", "About the Academy of Architecture". From 1741 he served as court architect to Elizabeth Petrovna. The first Russian architect of St. Petersburg, who, along with Trezzini, embodied the main architectural plans of Peter I. He worked in St. Petersburg, Tsarskoye Selo and Moscow. In 1742 he received the rank of colonel. Had an architectural "team". Of Zemtsov's works, the St. Petersburg Church of St. Simeon and Anna has survived (partially rebuilt).
Ivanov- (1865-1937)
Born in Voronezh. He was educated at the Voronezh Real School. In 1883-1888. studied at the Institute of Civil Engineers in St. Petersburg. Graduated with a gold medal. Traveled through Germany, Austria and Switzerland. Upon his return, he was assigned to the technical construction committee of the Ministry of Internal Affairs. Since 1889 he lived and worked in Moscow, since 1890 - city architect of Moscow. Representative of modernity.
Main works: Moscow Merchant Club (now the Lenin Komsomol Theater), the building of the eye hospital named after. Botkin, 2nd city hospital on Kaluga highway, hospital named after. Helmholtz on Sadovaya, children's model hospital, building of the city orphanage.
(1738-1812)
Born in Moscow. Studied at architecture school. In 1763-1767 worked in Tver. He was an assistant in the design of the Grand Kremlin Palace.
For the first time in Russia he created designs for domes and large spans. Since 1792 he headed the architectural school during the expedition of the Kremlin building. Pupils: , F. Sokolov, etc. Drew up a project for organizing a construction vocational school (“School of Masonry and Carpentry”). He supervised the preparation of the general and facade plan of Moscow, in connection with which he and his assistants completed thirty graphic albums of particular and civil buildings, containing drawings of most Moscow houses of the late 18th century. One of the founders and greatest masters of classicism. The author of most of the buildings that define the appearance of classical Moscow.
Main works: Petrovsky (Putevoy) Palace, the Senate building in the Kremlin with the famous domed hall, the Church of Metropolitan Philip, the Golitsyn hospital, the university building, the house of the Noble Assembly, the houses of Rubin, Baryshnikov, Demidov in Moscow, the church and mausoleum in the NikolskoPogoreloye estate in the Smolensk province .
Cameron Charles (1743-1812)
A Scot in Russian service. Born into a wealthy family of a master builder. He studied with his father and independently. From 1767 he lived in Rome, where he studied and measured ancient monuments. Returning to England, he worked on the book “The Baths of the Romans,” published in London in 1772. In 1779 he came to Russia. He was the architect of Tsarskoe Selo and Pavlovsk. Since 1796 he has been retired. Worked for gr. in Baturin. Since 1802 - chief architect of the Admiralty Colleges. Retired since 1805. Cameron was listed as a free artist and had no ranks, although he received a pension from the court. In addition to the above-mentioned Baths of the Romans, he released several albums of engravings. Cameron's attempts to become an academician of the Academy of Arts, thanks to Felten's intrigues, were unsuccessful.
A brightly individual representative of classicism, the finest master of interiors and one of the most brilliant draftsmen in the history of Russian architecture.
Main works: Cold Baths, Agate Rooms, Cameron Gallery, state apartments and private rooms of Catherine II in the Grand Palace in Tsarskoe Selo; palace gr. in Baturyn (destroyed); palace and park in Pavlovsk.
Quarenghi (Gwarenghi) Giacomo (1744-1817)
Born in Italy near Bergamo into an old noble family. He studied painting in Bergamo with G. Reggi, a student of Tiepolo. Traveling around Italy. In Rome, he first studied painting with, and then architecture with St. Poudv et al. Was influenced by A. Palladio. Imm noble friends and patrons. He worked a lot in Italy and England. In 1799 he was invited by Catherine II to St. Petersburg. Began working as a court architect, first in
Peterhof, then in the capital. One of the most famous architects of the 18th century. A brilliant draftsman. He left sketches of the main monuments of St. Petersburg. Worked under three emperors. He built a lot in Moscow and the provinces. Since 1805 he was a free member of the Academy of Arts. In 1788-1800 - architect of the chapter of the Order of St. John of Jerusalem (Maltese). In 1810 he visited his homeland, where he was greeted with triumph.
In 1814 he received hereditary Russian nobility and the Order of St. Vladimir 1st degree. He was associated with many representatives of Russian culture.
Died in St. Petersburg. In 1967, his ashes were transferred from the Volkonsky cemetery to the necropolis of the Alexander Nevsky Lavra, and opposite the building of the former Assignation Bank on Sadovaya Street. bust installed.
A brilliant master of the era of classicism. One of the creators of the appearance of the capital. Most of Quarenghi's works survive. He had a great influence on contemporary Russian architecture.
Main works in Russia: the English Palace in Peterhof (destroyed during the Great Patriotic War), the Mariinsky Hospital in Pavlovsk, the Academy of Sciences on the University Embankment, the Hermitage Theater, the Raphael Loggias in the Hermitage, the reconstruction of the state halls of the Winter Palace (rebuilt by Stasov after the fire), the Collegium Building Foreign Affairs on the English Embankment, Assignation Bank on Sadovaya Street, Silver Rows on Nevsky Prospect, Palace gr. Bezborodko on Pochtamtskaya street. (rebuilt), restructuring of the dacha gr. Bezborodko on Polyustrovskaya embankment, Saltykov's house on the Field of Mars, Fitingof's house on Admiralteysky Prospect, Yusupov's house on Sadovaya Street, Maltese Chapel at the Page Corps on Sadovaya Street, the Main Pharmacy building on Millionnaya Street, Mariinsky Hospital for the Poor on Liteiny Ave., Catherine Institute on Fontanka, the building of “His Majesty’s Cabinet” on Nevsky Prospect, Smolny Institute, Horse Guards Manege, Narva Triumphal Gate (rebuilt by Stasov), English Church on Angliyskaya Embankment, Alexander Palace and Concert Hall in Tsarskoe Selo, estate Zavadovskikh in Lyalichi.
He left a huge graphic heritage (about 1,500 sheets located in the repositories of the CIS and Europe).
(1720- after 1770)
In 1734 he was accepted as an “architectural student” in the Moscow “Office of Buildings”. He worked as an assistant first in Moscow during the design of coronation festivities during the coronation of Elizabeth Petrovna and in the Annenhof and Lefortovo palaces, and from 1743 with the rank of “architectural apprentice” in St. Petersburg for the expansion of the Tsarskoe Selo Palace. After Zemtsov’s death he worked independently in Tsarskoe Selo. At the same time, Kvasov began working for Hetman K. G. Razumovsky in Ukraine: in Kozelets, Glukhov and Baturyn. Kvasov’s main activity as an architect is connected with Ukraine. Since 1770, Kvasov held the position of “Little Russian architect.”
Of the numerous buildings of Kvasov in Ukraine, the cathedral in Kozelets, partially rebuilt by Rastrelli, and, presumably, the ground floor of the hetman’s palace in Baturyn, built mainly by G. Quarenghi (destroyed in the 20th century), have survived.
(1863- after 1907)
Born in Vilna. Graduated from the Vilna Real School. In 1883-1888. studied at the Institute of Civil Engineers. He is assigned to the technical construction committee of the Ministry of Internal Affairs. He worked in St. Petersburg, mainly on the construction of industrial buildings. From 1890 - in Moscow, retired and until the end of his life he was engaged in private practice. The largest representative of Moscow Art Nouveau. He built a lot, designed interiors, and made drawings of applied products for Moscow art factories.
Main works in Moscow: Nosov's mansion on Prechistenka, Isaev's on Pyatnitskaya Street, Isakov's house on Prechistenka (the most famous work), Mindovsky's house on Povarskaya Street, Khludov's gravestone chapel in the Pokrovsky Monastery, the Prague restaurant on Arbatskaya Square, Nikolskie shopping malls, the Metropol Hotel, stations of the Belarusian Railway near Moscow.
Kitner Hieronymus Sevastyanovich (1839-1929)
Born in St. Petersburg in the family of a “lamp maker”. In 1857 he graduated from the Construction School with the title of architectural assistant. From 1867 he was an academician of architecture, from 1868 he taught at the Construction School, and from 1876 he was an extraordinary professor and member of the council. In 1886-1894 - inspector, from 1888 - ordinary, and from 1906 - emeritus professor of the Institute of Civil Engineers. In addition, from 1895 to 1902 he was a professor of architecture at the Institute of Railway Engineers, and from 1911 he was an honorary member of the Academy of Arts. One of the founders of the St. Petersburg Society of Architects, in 1887-1905 - fellow chairman, in 1905-1917 - chairman of the society. He edited the magazine "Zodchiy". Comrade of the Chairman of the Standing Committee of the All-Russian Congresses of Architects. Inspector and then trustee of the first school of construction foremen in Russia. I was studying social activities- was a member of the City Duma and a member of a number of committees. Died in exile.
Main works: the building of the Agricultural Museum in Solyanoy Gorodok, the building of the Institute of Civil Engineers in the 2nd company of the Izmailovsky Regiment, market pavilions on Sennaya Square (destroyed), the building of the Lutheran parish school on Bolshoy Prospect of Vasilievsky Island, the Siegel mansion and factory on Yamskaya Street, Palm greenhouse in the Botanical Garden of the Academy of Sciences, the laboratory building of the Institute of Railway Engineers, in addition, the Moscow Engineering School, a complex of buildings of the Kyiv Polytechnic Institute.
(1858-1924)
Born in Moscow into the family of a businessman close to art circles. He graduated from the Moscow School of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture, then from the Academy of Arts in St. Petersburg. From 1882, he underwent an internship, first in Italy in Ravenna, then in Paris with C. Garnier. Upon returning to Moscow, he worked for an academician on the construction site Historical Museum on the Red Square. Working independently, he built more than 60 structures in Moscow. He was a professor at the Riga Polytechnic School and Higher Technical School. Among the students -,. Author of many books, including A Guide to Architecture.
One of the most prominent architects of pre-revolutionary Russia. He had enormous culture and erudition. His buildings were famous for their high technical performance.
Main works: Middle shopping arcades, Trekhgorny Brewery, Perlov's apartment building on Myasnitskaya, a complex of hospital buildings on Devichye Pole, the Muir and Murilis department store (TSUM), the Museum of Fine Arts (Museum of Fine Arts), Borodinsky Bridge (jointly with engineer), the Colosseum cinema on Chistye Prudy, the tomb of Prince. Yusupov in Arkhangelsk.
(1860-1942)
Born in Tsarskoe Selo. He graduated from the Institute of Civil Engineers in 1887 and was invited to serve in the Office of Southern Railways in Kyiv. He taught at the Kiev Polytechnic Institute. Since 1912 - professor.
A major architect, he worked in the spirit of eclecticism and neoclassicism.
The main works before the revolution: stations in Kozin, Bendery, Korosten, etc., a number of buildings of the Kyiv Agricultural Exhibition, in Kyiv - the State Bank, the Commercial Institute, buildings of higher courses for women and the Russian Technical Society. He built a lot after the revolution.
(1726-1772)
Born in Tobolsk in the family of an official. A famous architect exiled to Tobolsk took him as a student. After a short exile, Blank returned to Moscow with Kokorinov. In Moscow, Kokorinov was on Blank’s “team”, then transferred to Blank, who came to Moscow from St. Petersburg, and after the latter’s death, to K. In 1749, with the rank of Gezel, he was transferred to Blank, and began teaching at his architectural school. He was involved in the restoration of the walls and gates of the Kremlin and Kitaigorod. In 1753 he was summoned to St. Petersburg to travel abroad. The trip did not take place, but in St. Petersburg Kokorinov became close to gr. and took part in the creation of the Academy of Arts. He wrote the Academy's charter and designed its creation. From 1761 he was director, and from 1768 he was rector of the Academy.
The founder of classicism in Russia. Outstanding teacher. Among the students -.
Main works: the building of the Academy of Arts, the completion of which he did not live to see; Razumovsky Palace on the Moika (both projects jointly with WallenDelamot). Most of Kokorinov's works have not survived.
Corinthian (Varentsov) Mikhail Petrovich (1758-1851)
Born in Arzamas. He studied at the Arzamas school of painting. In 1810-1817 studied in St. Petersburg at the Academy of Arts. In 1812-1823 he worked in Arzamas, in 1823-1832 in Simbirsk and from 1832 until the end of his life in Kazan. He was involved in teaching a lot. Founded an architectural school in Arzamas. He taught architecture at Kazan University. Died in Kazan.
One of the largest representatives of classicism in the province.
Main works: buildings of the Kazan University complex (library, anatomical theater, observatory), the building of the Noble Assembly in Simbirsk, the Resurrection Cathedral in Arzamas, the Lutheran Church in Nizhny Novgorod, the church in the village of Pavlov, Nizhny Novgorod province, the cathedral in Simbirsk (not preserved).
(1700 or 1701-1747)
Born in Moscow. Sent by Peter I to Holland. Studied with Scheinfurt. In 1727-1741 - architect of the Admiralty Department. Built the second stone building of the Admiralty. He was also involved in ship finishing. From 1741 he worked in Moscow. Had an architectural “team” there. Among the students: S. Chevakinsky, A. Kokorinov, D. Ukhtomsky and others.
Of Korobov’s works, only the Church of St. Panteleimon in St. Petersburg, which was part of the Particular Shipyard on Fontanka, has survived. The Theological Church with a bell tower in Kronstadt stood until the 30s of the 20th century.
(1817-1887)
Born in St. Petersburg. In 1826-1839 studied at the Academy of Arts. In 1839-1842. worked with Ton in Moscow. In 1842-1846. was on a retirement trip to Italy with Benoit and Rezanov. Participated in the measurements of the cathedral in Orvietto. Since 1850 - academician, since 1853 - professor at the Academy of Arts. He served in the Department of Railways, architect of the Chapter of Russian Orders, and chief architect of the imperial theaters.
One of the most talented representatives of eclecticism. He built in the so-called “European” styles.
Main works: Baltic station, Stieglitz mansion on the embankment. Neva, Mariinsky market on Sadovaya street. (not preserved), house of the Mutual Land Loan Society on Admiralteyskaya embankment. (together with), hospital of the community of sisters of mercy on Sergievskaya street, church in Narva. Many works have not survived.
(1877-1944)
Born in Moscow in the family of a doctor. He graduated from the Riga Polytechnic Institute in 1906 with the title of engineer-architect. Awarded a trip abroad (1906-1907). From 1908 he was a city architect in Balti (Bessarabia), from 1912 he lived and worked in Yekaterinoslav as a landscaping engineer, and at the same time conducted a private practice. After the revolution, he held responsible positions related to design and construction, and taught at the Dnepropetrovsk Institute of Transport Engineers. A master of high professional culture, he adhered to the neoclassical direction.
The main buildings in Yekaterinoslav: a number of apartment buildings, a boarding house for the children of officers who died in the World War, an anatomical building of the medical institute.
Krasovsky Apollinary Kaetanovich (1816-1875)
A major architectural theorist who influenced the formation of the professional thinking of several generations of architects in the mid and second half of the 19th century. According to contemporaries, “he laid a solid foundation for the teaching of civil architecture as a science in our technical higher educational institutions.” He taught at the St. Petersburg Construction School for 37 years, preparing its transformation into the Institute of Civil Engineers (1881). He taught a course in architecture at the Institute of the Corps of Railway Engineers, at St. Petersburg University, and a course in construction art at the Mining Institute. Honorary free associate of the Academy of Arts.
Leblond Jean-Baptiste-Alexandre (1679-1719)
Famous French architect and theorist. Lenotra. Author (together with Duvillier) of a course on architecture. Invited to Russia by Lefort and Zotov after the death of A. Schluter. He met Peter I in France and managed to interest him in his projects. In St. Petersburg since 1716 Appointed “architect general” with the subordination of all architects and engineers working in St. Petersburg. Author of the first master plan of St. Petersburg. The implementation of the plan turned out to be unrealistic, but many of Leblon’s demographic and urban planning ideas later formed the basis for the planning and development of the city. He also worked in Strelya and Peterhof. Author of the first Peterhof Palace, rebuilt by Rastrelli, and the basic layout of the cascade.
No reliable buildings of Leblon have survived. Some researchers attribute to him the Marly pavilions, the Hermitage and, less likely, Monplaisir in Peterhof Park.
(1870-1945)
Born in St. Petersburg in the family of a tailor, a Swedish citizen. He graduated from school at St. Catherine's Church. He studied at the Stieglitz School for two years. In 1890-1896. studied at the Academy of Arts. He mainly built in St. Petersburg for private orders. He had his own design bureau. Participated in many competitions. In 1910-1917 taught at the Faculty of Architecture of the Women's Polytechnic Institute. Since 1909, honorary academician of architecture. In 1914-1916 participated in the publication of the Architectural and Artistic Yearbook. In 1918 he left for Sweden, where he worked a lot and fruitfully.
The most talented representative of Art Nouveau, one of the best Russian architects. The so-called “northern modernity”, developed by Lidval, contributed to Russia’s exit at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th centuries. to the world architectural arena. Lidval's numerous works are distinguished by high artistic merit, excellent taste and brilliant functional and technical solutions.
Main works: the Alexandrov Hotel in Apraksin Lane, its own apartment building with a workshop on Kamennoostrovsky Avenue; residential buildings of Zimmerman on Kamennoostrovsky Ave., the Swedish Church on M. Konyushennaya St., Meltser on B. Konyushennaya St., Libikha on Mokhovaya St., Tolstoy on the embankment. Fontanka, Nobel on Nyostadtskaya Street, AzovskoDonskaya Bank on Bolshaya Morskaya Street, Astoria Hotel on Isaac Square, houses on Goloday Island (“New Petersburg”); Russian bank in Kyiv.
(1868-1933)
Engineer, the largest Russian specialist in reinforced concrete structures. Developed a theory of calculation for destructive loads. He studied at Moscow University (graduated in 1891). He worked in Moscow at the construction company "Yulia Gun". He taught construction mechanics at the Moscow School of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture. After the revolution - professor at the Higher Technical School.
The main buildings before the revolution: the vaults of the Museum of Fine Arts in Moscow, a number of industrial structures (beamless roofs), a reinforced concrete passage at the Nizhny Novgorod exhibition.
(1751-1803)
Born into a poor noble family. He had no special education. In 1768 he entered the Izmailovsky Life Guards Regiment in St. Petersburg, where he graduated from the officer school. Transferred to service in the Collegium of Foreign Affairs. He traveled abroad a lot (for the first time in 1776-1777). Being a diplomat and writer, he was involved in architecture sporadically, although fruitfully. He was an inventor in the field of heating and building materials. Invented earth construction. Honorary member of the Academy of Arts, member of the Russian Academy. He was associated with most cultural and political figures of his time (Chancellor Bezborodko, gr., etc.). Translated the works of Palladio. Wrote the first Russian book on heating. Among the students -. Outstanding cultural figure of the 18th century. Architect, engineer, writer, translator, musician, folklorist, social activist and statesman.
Architectural activity of Lvov in the 19th century. was almost completely unknown. Only at the beginning of the 20th century. His main works were attributed, of which the following were preserved: the Neva Gate of the Peter and Paul Fortress, the building of the post office (Post Office) in St. Petersburg, the Priory Palace in Gatchina, the Boris and Gleb Cathedral in Torzhok, the Church of St. Catherine in Valdai, etc.
Stanislavovich (1876-1944)
Born in Volkovysk (Belarus). Since 1895 he studied in St. Petersburg at the Academy of Arts. In 1902-1903 I traveled as a pensioner to Germany and Italy. Worked in St. Petersburg, Moscow, Gungerburg (Ust-Narva). Since 1912 - academician of architecture. In 1917-1918 - Chairman of the Petrograd Society of Architects. He built apartment buildings, commercial and industrial buildings, and bridges. Worked a lot with. In 1918 he left for Warsaw, where he worked fruitfully until the Second World War.
Killed during the Warsaw Uprising.
A talented but somewhat monotonous architect, Lyalevich built mainly in the “neo-Renaissance” style, modernized to meet the needs of the 20th century.
Main works: in St. Petersburg, the Mertens trading house on Nevsky Prospect, the Pokatilova mansion and apartment building on Karpovsky Lane, the Mertens mansion on Kamenny Island, the Sytny Market, a number of apartment buildings; house of the Triangle partnership in Moscow.
(1784-1854)
Born in Oranienbaum in the family of a caretaker of the palace church. From 1795 he studied with. In 1807 he graduated from the Academy of Arts with a gold medal. In 1808-1811. was a pensioner in Italy with. After returning, he taught at the Academy of Arts from 1813, headed the “promising” class, and from 1818 he was a professor. He built a lot for private orders and in the provinces. He participated in a number of competitions, including for the construction of the Cathedral of Christ the Savior and the Bolshoi Theater in Moscow. From 1831 he was rector of the Academy of Arts.
A consistent representative of classicism, whose decline occurred at the end of his life. A prolific but unoriginal architect.
Main works: Demidov School in Yaroslavl, St. Nicholas Edinoverie Church in St. Petersburg, gymnasium in Ufa, Assumption Church in Nizhny Novgorod, Gostiny and Mytny Dvors in Rostov the Great. Melnikov's best work is a complex of buildings on Primorsky Boulevard in Odessa with a monument to Richelieu.
(1842-1906)
Born in St. Petersburg in the family of a carriage maker. He graduated from the Lutheran School at St. Peter's Church. In 1858 he entered the drawing school of the Society for the Encouragement of Arts, and in 1860 he entered the Academy of Arts in the architecture class. Studied with and in a mosaic class. On the recommendation of Eppinger, he became an assistant to and took part in his work on restructuring the interiors of the Academy of Arts. In 1867 he graduated from the Academy with a large gold medal and was sent as a pensioner to Italy. In 1871 he returned and presented to the Academy a project for the restoration of the theater in Taormina, for which he received the title of academician. Worked as an architect at the Main Engineering Directorate; from 1874 he taught at the Central School of Technical Drawing of Baron Stieglitz (from 1877 to 1897 - director).
In 1885 he went to Dresden to get acquainted with museum construction. He built the school museum building. He carried out orders from the court and had the rank of actual state councilor. In 1886, due to a conflict with the management of the school, he resigned. In 1897 he left for Dresden, where he lived and worked until the end of his life.
Messmacher's activities occurred during the decline of eclecticism. His works, notable for their splendor, which is not typical for the development of St. Petersburg, are executed with great skill and imagination, but are tedious due to the accumulation of details and a mixture of styles. Their advantages include a clear functional solution and high quality workmanship, making them seem like a transition to modernity. Messmacher's main merit is the establishment of artistic and industrial education in Russia, the education of several generations of masters of applied art.
Main works: the church of Cosmas and Damian (not preserved), the palace led. book Alexei Alexandrovich on the Moika, the palace led. book Mikhail Mikhailovich on Admiralteyskaya embankment, State Council Archive on Millionnaya Street, building of the museum of the Central School of Technical Drawing of Baron Stieglitz.
Michetti Niccolo (1675-1759)
Italian architect, representative of the Baroque era. . He worked in Rome, where he was a papal architect. In 1718, he was invited by P. Kologrivov to Russia and appointed “royal architect” instead of the deceased Leblon. He completed the construction of Leblon in Peterhof. He worked in Reval (Tallinn) and in Strelna near St. Petersburg. He had some influence on, who was his student and assistant. In 1723 he left Russia.
Main works: completion of the Monplaisir, Marly, Hermitage pavilions and a number of fountains in Peterhof; the Ekaterinenthal Palace (Kadriorg) in Reval (finished), the palace in Strelna (rebuilt by L. Ruska), the project of a lighthouse over the Kronstadt Canal (not implemented).
(1700-1763)
From the small landed nobility of the Kostroma province. In 1718 he was sent to St. Petersburg to the Academy of Navigational Sciences. Upon completion - assistant and student of N. Michetti on the construction of the palace in Strelna. In 1723 he was sent to Holland, studied in Antwerp with I. Baumstedt, worked in St. Petersburg and the surrounding area, and from 1731 in Moscow. After the death of I. Mordvinov in 1734, he supervised the drawing up of a city plan. In 1754 he built St. Andrew's Church in Kyiv according to the project.
The main original buildings of Michurin have not survived (Trinity Church on Arbat Square, the church and bell tower of the Chrysostom Monastery, the Cloth Yard). Of the surviving buildings, only the Cathedral of the Svensky Monastery (Bryansk region) is known.
Montferrand Auguste Ricard (1786-1858)
Born in France. Studied with S. Percier and. I was in Italy. Served in the army. He worked in St. Petersburg in the Committee for Buildings and Hydraulic Works as a draftsman. Soon he presented Alexander I with an album of projects for St. Isaac's Cathedral (a compilation of various styles - Chinese, Indian, Byzantine, Gothic, Greek, etc.). He was appointed court architect, and in 1818 - builder of St. Isaac's Cathedral. Construction continued until Montferrand's death. In 1826 he joined the commission to review projects for the Cathedral of Christ the Savior in Moscow. Since 1831 he was a free member of the Academy of Arts. Montferrand performed one of the most difficult construction works of the 19th century - the raising of the columns of St. Isaac's Cathedral and the Alexander Column, in which he proved himself to be an excellent engineer and organizer. There is no reason to consider Montferrand an “architectural official,” although there are undoubtedly opportunistic elements in his work.
All Montferrand buildings in St. Petersburg have been preserved: St. Isaac's Cathedral (second), the house of Prince Lobanov-Rostovsky on Admiralteysky Prospect, his own house on the Moika, the Demidov (Gagarin) mansion on Bolshaya Morskaya, the Alexander Column on Palace Square, the interiors of the Winter Palace, the monument Nicholas I on St. Isaac's Square (sculptor P. Klodt).
(1868-1953)
A major master of the early 20th century, who worked in the spirit of Art Nouveau and Neoclassicism. He received his education at the Academy of Arts.
Main works: in Kazan and Saratov - a university complex (buildings of the medical and physics faculties), his own house.
Nestrukh (Neshturkha) Fedor Pavlovich (1857-1936)
Born in the village. Fomina Balka near Odessa in the family of a printing worker. He worked in Odessa design workshops as a draftsman. In 1887 he graduated from the Academy of Arts with the title of class artist of the 1st degree. Based on a competition, he was hired for the position of chief city architect of Pskov; During the same years, he taught the basics of architecture at the local land surveying school. Since 1900 he lived and worked in Odessa. In 1902-1922 - chief architect of Odessa. After 1925, he conducted teaching work at the Odessa Art School. Died in Odessa.
Prominent architect and teacher; a typical representative of the neoclassical movement in architecture.
Main buildings: in Pskov - Commercial Bank, diocesan girls' school with a church; in Odessa - an ambulance building, a city public library, a hospital for nervous patients on Slobodka, an evangelical hospital, Fruit Passage; a number of medical and resort buildings on the estuaries.
(1847-1911)
Born in Tsarskoe Selo. In 1870 he graduated from the Academy of Arts. In 1891 he received the title of class artist, in 1892 - academician of architecture. Since 1870 he has worked in the Kyiv city government. He was a city architect (1873-1887), diocesan (1875-1898), architect of the Kiev Pechersk Lavra (1892-1899), one of the organizers and director of the Kyiv Art School. He was elected chairman of the architectural department of the Kyiv branch of the Russian Technical Society and the Kyiv Literary and Artistic Society, and a delegate to congresses of Russian architects. Died in Kyiv.
An outstanding architect who worked in Kyiv; a typical representative of eclecticism.
Main works: the Bergonier theater-circus, the building of the Merchant Assembly, the Ascension, Kiev-Blagoveshchenskaya, Alexander Nevskaya churches (the last two have not survived); Intercession Church, St. Nicholas Cathedral and residential buildings of the Kiev Intercession Monastery, the refectory of the Kiev Pechersk Lavra, a number of apartment buildings and mansions; restoration work in the St. Sophia and Assumption Cathedrals, St. Andrew's Church.
(1883-1958)
Born in St. Petersburg into a family close to art. In 1901 he entered the Institute of Civil Engineers (graduated in 1910). In 1905-1906 worked in Helsingfors in the workshop of A. Lindgren and E. Saarinen, from 1906 - in St. Petersburg as an assistant; also led independent design. Traveled around Russia.
Great artist. Talented architect and teacher. Its main activity belongs to Soviet era, however, he developed as a creative personality with a bright individuality before the revolution, when he worked in the spirit of “northern modernism” and then retrospectivism.
The main works before 1917 were the dacha of Leonid Andreev near Rayavol, an apartment building on Aptekarsky Island in St. Petersburg, and several mansions.
(1872-1916)
Born on the Usichi estate in the Volyn province. In 1896, after military service, he entered the Institute of Civil Engineers, and in 1901, the Academy of Arts, where he studied with. In 1906 he received the title of architect-artist. Traveled as a pensioner to Italy, France, Germany, Belgium, Holland and Austria. Upon his return, he built a lot, mainly on orders from large companies.
Talented architect. He worked in the spirit of rational modernism, but his most famous buildings - in the "neo-Renaissance" style - are distinguished by excellent detailing, functional perfection, skillful combination with the surrounding buildings, but at the same time they are exaggeratedly monumental.
The main works in St. Petersburg are the Russian Commercial and Industrial Bank on Bolshaya Morskaya Street, the Wavelberg banking house on Nevsky Prospect, the house of City Institutions on Kronverksky Prospect, the Temple-monument to Russian sailors who died in the war with Japan on New Admiralty Canal (not preserved), the building of the Ministry of Trade and Industry on Tuchkova Embankment, the project for the transformation of St. Petersburg (from and); house of the Northern Insurance Company in Moscow (with and)
(1848-1918)
Born in Moscow. He studied at the school of painting, sculpture and architecture. In 1874 he moved to the Academy of Arts in St. Petersburg, with which he was associated until the end of his days. From 1879 to 1886 he was awarded a gold medal in practice in Italy. For the measurement drawings of the Palatine Chapel in Palermo he was awarded the title of academician. Since 1887 - associate professor at the Academy of Arts, since 1892 - professor. After the reorganization of the Academy of Arts - head of the workshop. Rector of the Higher Art School at the Academy of Arts. He was also the architect of the school council under the Synod and a member of the technical and construction committee under the Ministry of Internal Affairs.
A major architect and teacher. A typical representative of the eclecticism era, he worked in the “Russian style”.
Main works: the cathedral in Sofia in Bulgaria, the cathedral in Cetinje in Montenegro, the Synodal House in St. Petersburg, the main buildings of the All-Russian Art and Industrial Exhibition of 1896 in Nizhny Novgorod, the Duma building and the city trading house in Rostov-on-Don, Verkhniye shopping arcades in Moscow on Red Square (GUM).
Rastrelli Bartolomeo Francesco (Bartholomew Varfolomeevich), Count (1700-1771)
Italian by origin. Born in Paris. The son of an architect and sculptor. He studied with his father. In 1716 he came to St. Petersburg with his father, who had concluded an agreement with Peter I, and was his assistant. In 1722 he began to work independently as an architect. Performed private orders. In the period from 1722 to 1730, he traveled to Italy and France twice to improve his skills in architecture (once for 5 years). He built in St. Petersburg, Moscow for Anna Ioannovna and in Courland for Biron. With the accession of Elizabeth Petrovna in 1741, he became her favorite court architect.
In addition to St. Petersburg, he worked in Peterhof, Tsarskoe Selo and in the provinces.
Major General, Knight of the Order of St. Anne, Academician of Architecture (1770). He had a number of students and followers. With the accession of Catherine II in 1762, Rastrelli temporarily retired, and in 1763 he was finally dismissed and left for Switzerland. Rastrelli's work has been studied quite fully. Most of his works have survived.
The most talented master of the mid-18th century, creator of bright architectural style, sometimes called "Elizabethan Baroque". Together with Quarenghi and Rossi, he is rightfully considered the greatest Russian architect.
Main works: in St. Petersburg - Smolny Monastery (not finished), palace (partially rebuilt), palace (interiors redone), Travel Palace on Srednyaya Rogatka (destroyed in the 40s of the XX century), Summer Palace of Elizabeth Petrovna (was on the site Engineering Castle), the Great Peterhof Palace, the Great Palace and park pavilions in Tsarskoe Selo, the Winter Palace (the interiors were rebuilt after the fire); in Moscow - Winter Annenhof in the Kremlin (does not exist), Summer Annenhof in Lefortovo (does not exist); in Kyiv - St. Andrew's Church; in Courland - Biron's palaces in Rundale and Mitau.
(1817-1887)
Born in St. Petersburg. In 1827 he entered the Academy of Arts. A student, later his closest assistant, who completed his unfinished works. After graduating from the Academy (1838), he worked in Moscow. In 1842-1846. together with and was on a retirement trip to Italy. Upon his return in 1850, he received the title of academician for the publication of measurement drawings of the cathedral in Orvieto. From 1852 - professor, from 1871 - rector of the Academy of Arts. From 1870 until the end of his life - Chairman of the St. Petersburg Society of Architects. He worked mainly on orders from the court.
One of the leading masters of the eclectic era, a major teacher and public figure. He built mainly in the Neo-Renaissance style. An excellent draftsman and connoisseur of styles.
Main works: buildings in Ropsha, the palace was built. book Vladimir Alexandrovich on Palace Embankment in St. Petersburg (Rezanov’s most famous work); participation in the design and construction of the Grand Kremlin Palace and the Cathedral of Christ the Savior in Moscow; Metropolitan Cathedral and Church of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker in Vilna; palace in Livadia, palace in Ilyinsky near Moscow; a number of mansions and apartment buildings in St. Petersburg, Moscow, Tver.
(1869-1932)
From a family of hereditary civil engineers. After graduating from the cadet corps and military school, he served in a sapper battalion. In 1896 he graduated from the Military Engineering Academy in St. Petersburg. From 1897 to 1912 - assistant on the construction of the Museum of Fine Arts and other buildings. Since 1900 he worked independently.
A major architect and engineer who worked extensively and fruitfully in Moscow before and after the revolution. An experienced professional, a rationalist in spirit and style.
Main works before the revolution: a building of cheap apartments for families on 2nd Meshchanskaya Street, building
Northern Insurance Company on Ilyinka (with and), women's gymnasium in B. Kazenny lane, Bryansky (Kyiv) station (with and).
Rinaldi Antonio (1710-1794)
An Italian in Russian service. Student and collaborator L. Vanvitelli. Visited England. In 1752 he was invited by the hetman count to Ukraine. He worked in Kyiv and Baturin, then in Moscow. From 1754 he was the architect of the so-called “small courtyard” (the courtyard of the heir Pavel Petrovich). From 1762 - court architect of Catherine II. I worked in St. Petersburg in Oranienbaum. In 1784 he returned to Italy and lived in Rome until the end of his life.
A master of exquisite taste, whose work is on the verge of baroque and classicism.
Main works: Vorontsov’s dacha “Novo-Znamenka” near St. Petersburg; park and palace buildings in Oranienbaum, including the famous Chinese Palace and Rolling Hill; Church of the Resurrection of Christ in Pecher; Catherine's Cathedral in Yamburg; Gatchina Palace, the building of the Tuchkov Buyan (hemp warehouses), the Prince Vladimir Cathedral, the Marble Palace, St. Isaac's Cathedral (on the site of the existing one), the Myatlev house in St. Petersburg.
Rossi Carlo (Karl Ivanovich) (1755-1849)
Born in St. Petersburg into an acting family. He studied with V. Brenna and traveled abroad with him. Began work under the leadership of Brenna in Pavlovsk. In 1806-1814. worked in Moscow, trying his hand at the “Gothic” version of the Russian style; taught at the Kremlin architectural school. At the same time, he designed residential buildings, shopping arcades, public places, churches, hospitals, etc. for Tver and the cities of Tver, Yaroslavl and Novgorod provinces. Chief Architect of Tver. Since 1814 in St. Petersburg, since 1816 he has been one of the four main architects of the Committee of Buildings and Hydraulic Works, led by A. Betancourt (together with V. Stasov, A. Mikhailov 2m and A. Moduit).
He carried out a comprehensive reconstruction of the capital's center, creating the largest ensembles of Palace, Senate, Mikhailovskaya Squares and the Alexandria Theater. Principled and independent, Rossi did not have high ranks (he received the rank of collegiate adviser in Tver), and did not become an academician. True, in 1822 he was elected an honorary free fellow (that is, an honorary academician) of the Academy of Arts. In 1828 he was awarded the title of professor at the Florence Academy. After a conflict with P. Bazin, Rossi was reprimanded for “disobedience to the instructions of his superiors” and resigned (1832), but continued to design and build until the end of his life. He died in St. Petersburg in great need, burdened with a huge family. In 1940, Rossi's ashes were transferred from the Volkovsky cemetery to the necropolis of the Alexander Nevsky Lavra. The former Teatralnaya Street is named after him. Rossi's creations, a bit dry and with a rather monotonous façade decoration, are nevertheless striking in their scope in solving urban planning problems.
The great Russian city planner and architect, to whom Petersburg owes its glory to a large extent during the Classical era.
Main works: in Moscow - the theater on Arbat Square and the Catherine Church in the Kremlin (not preserved), the crowning of the Nikolskaya Tower of the Kremlin (restored after the fire of 1812 by O. Bonet); shopping arcades in Tver, Bezhetsk and Rybinsk, the cathedral in Torzhok; in St. Petersburg - the ensemble of the Elagin Palace (palace, services, park and park pavilions), the ensemble of the Mikhailovsky Palace and Mikhailovskaya Square, reconstruction of the territory of the Mikhailovsky (Engineering) Castle (punching Sadovaya Street, construction of several bridges across the Moika and Fontanka, creation of Manezhnaya Square ), the ensemble of the Alexandria Theater (theater, Public Library, pavilions of the Anichkov Palace, Teatralnaya Street and Chernysheva Square), the ensemble of Palace Square (General Staff), the ensemble of Senate Square (Senate and Synod).
Ruska Aloyzny Ivanovich (Luigi) (1758-1822)
The Italian is originally from Switzerland. In 1767, he came to Russia with his father, stone craftsman Geronimo Giovanni Rusca, who was invited to build St. Isaac's Cathedral and the monument to Peter the Great. Apparently he studied with his father. He officially entered the service in 1783. He was engaged in state and palace buildings, in addition, he built a lot for private orders. In addition to St. Petersburg, he worked in Oranienbaum, Peterhof, Tsarskoye Selo, Ropsha; together with Stasov and Geste, he was involved in the development of “model” facades for provincial cities. In 1818 he resigned from service and left Russia. Died in Italy in Valenza.
One of the most prolific masters of late classicism. His legacy is almost endless.
The main works in St. Petersburg: the Bobrinsky Palace on Galernaya Street, the barracks of the Cavalry Guard, Izmailovsky, Grenadier, Astrakhan regiments, the arena of the Cavalry Guard Regiment, the house of the Jesuit Order on the Catherine Canal, the portico of the Perinnaya Line, the house with four pediments on the corner of Sadovaya and Italianskaya streets.
(1874-1942)
Born in Tiflis in the family of a teacher. In 1902 he graduated with honors from the Academy of Arts in the workshop. He worked at the Railway Administration in Kyiv, taught at the Kiev Polytechnic School, at the Kiev Art School, and in 1917 he became one of the organizers and rector of the Kyiv Architectural Institute.
A major architect who worked in Kyiv, a representative of late eclecticism. Teacher.
Main works in Kyiv: the building of the People's Auditorium, the Shantser illusion on Khreshchatyk, the hospital of the Society of Sisters of Charity for several apartment buildings. I built a lot after the revolution.
(1797-1875)
From a family of serf princes. . He was sent to the Perm gymnasium and in 1815 - a “free pensioner” to the Academy of Arts. In 1818 he was dismissed from the Academy as a serf. He worked on the construction of the Peterhof paper mill. In 1820 he received his freedom. In 1821, having received the title of architect-artist, he was appointed to the position of architect of the Perm (Ural) mining department. From 1832 he lived in St. Petersburg, taught at various educational institutions and was involved in social activities. In 1839 he moved to Moscow, where he lived until his death. He had the rank of Privy Councilor. Dealt with heating and ventilation issues. The founder of Russian rationalist architectural theory. Author of the "Manual to Architecture" - one of the first professional textbooks, and numerous works on plumbing.
The main work is related to industrial construction in the Urals and development in Perm. Author of many inventions, including economical stoves.
(1744-1808)
Born in Moscow in the family of a deacon. He studied at a school for children of the “clerical rank”, then at a gymnasium at Moscow University. In 1756 he was transferred to St. Petersburg, to the Academy of Arts; studied with Kokorinov and Valen-Delamot. In 1762 he was sent as a pensioner to Paris, where he worked for C. de Wailly. In 1766 he moved to Rome. He returned to St. Petersburg in 1768. Since 1772, he played a leading role in the Commission on the Stone Structure of St. Petersburg and Moscow, and was involved in the planning of cities (Voronezh, Pskov, Nikolaev, Ekaterinoslav). Court Advisor. Designed a lot for the book. . From 1769 - associate professor, from 1785 - professor, from 1794 - associate rector of architecture at the Academy of Arts. From 1800 he headed the commission for the construction of the Kazan Cathedral.
One of the leading classicists of the late 18th century. Notable for the rigor of his style, his work had a huge influence on the development of the classicist school. Thus, the Tauride Palace became a model of estate construction in Russia.
Main works: in St. Petersburg - the Tauride Palace, the Trinity Cathedral and the Gate Church of the Alexander Nevsky Lavra; a number of manor houses in the vicinity of St. Petersburg, of which the houses in Taitsy and Skvoritsy, the palace in Pella (not preserved); palaces in Bogoroditsk, Bobriki and Nikolsky-Gagarin near Moscow; Theotokos Cathedral in Kazan; magistrate in Nikolaev.
(1769-1848)
Born in Moscow in the family of a minor official. He studied at the gymnasium at Moscow University. Upon graduation in 1783, he entered the Deanery as an architectural student. In 1794-1795 - non-commissioned officer of the Preobrazhensky regiment, in 1797 assigned to the construction of salt factories with the rank of collegiate secretary. Participated in a competition for hotel projects at the entrance to Moscow on the site of a demolished white stone wall (Boulevard Ring). Promoted to provincial secretaries. He participated in the design of public holidays during the coronation of Alexander I. In 1802, by personal decree, he was sent for improvement to France, Italy and England. While in Rome he was accepted as a professor at the Academy of St. Luke. In 1808 he returned to Russia. Placed under the jurisdiction of the “Cabinet of His Imperial Majesty”, from that time he took part in major works commissioned by the court and the state. One of the four chief architects of the Committee of Structures and Hydraulic Works (together with K. Rossi, A. Mikhailov 2m and A. Moduit). Since 1811 - academician. Acting State Councilor. Professor at the Academy of Arts in the class of architecture.
The largest architect, representative of late classicism. With enormous productivity and high professionalism, he remained an epigone of the classicist school. In the last years of his life he tried to work in the “Russian style”.
Main works: in St. Petersburg - Provision stores on the Obvodny Canal, Pavlovsk Barracks on the Field of Mars, Main Court Stables, Yamskaya Market on Razyezzhay Street, Spaso-Preobrazheyasky and Trinity-Izmailovsky Cathedrals; in Moscow - Provision warehouses on the Crimean Highway, the Grand Kremlin Palace (rebuilt by K. Ton), a hotel at the Intercession Gate, the Tithe Church in Kiev, the Alexander Nevsky Cathedral in Saratov, the Alexander Nevsky Church in Potsdam, a complex of buildings in the Arakcheev estate in Gruzine on Volkhov.
(1850-1908)
He graduated from the Construction School in St. Petersburg in 1873 and from that time on he taught history at the school, then at the Institute of Civil Engineers. architecture, in 1895-1903 - director. He lectured at the Technological Institute. He seriously studied Russian architecture. In 1886 he traveled to Italy, Greece, and Turkey. In 1893 he was approved as a full member of the Academy of Arts.
Prominent architect, theorist, architectural historian, restorer, teacher.
Main works: the cathedral in Peterhof, participation in the construction of the monument to Alexander II in the Moscow Kremlin, translation of the book by E. Viollet-le-Duc “Russian Art”, a number of articles on the history of Russian architecture.
(1857-1921)
Born in Moscow into the family of an icon painter. In 1878-1882. studied at the Academy of Arts. Under the influence, he decided to devote himself to the study of Russian architecture. During 1883-1887 made a number of trips around Russia, measuring, drawing, photographing architectural monuments, and continued research subsequently, in connection with restoration work. He traveled abroad several times - to France, Italy, Turkey, Germany, etc. in connection with research and design work. In 1885 - academician, in 1902 - professor. One of the initiators of the cause of monument protection. He designed and built a lot in the spirit of Russian and neo-Russian styles. After the revolution he was removed from teaching. He died in Khvalynsk.
An outstanding researcher of Russian architecture, architect, artist, theorist, teacher, restorer.
Main works: Alexander Passage in Kazan (c), monument-tomb to Russian soldiers in San Stefano (Turkey), churches on an estate near Smolensk, in the village. Fedino, Moscow province, in Lugansk; restoration of the Spaso-Mirozhsky Cathedral in Pskov, the Transfiguration Cathedral in Pereslavl-Zalessky, St. Sophia Cathedral in Novgorod, the Church of the Savior-Nereditsa near Novgorod (the project was carried out by P. Pokryshkin), etc. A number of books, articles and albums on the history of Russian architecture, in including issues of “Monuments of Russian Architecture”.
, count (1844-1919(7))
From the Russified French aristocrats. He graduated from the Academy of Arts in 1866, after a trip abroad he worked mainly in St. Petersburg on private orders. Academician of Architecture (1892), honorary member of the Academy of Arts, professor at the Institute of Civil Engineers. He was involved in many social activities: he was the organizer of the first congresses of Russian architects, chairman of the Society of Architects and Artists; one of the founders and chairman of the "Old Petersburg" society. One of the most prolific architects of his time. His position in architecture is twofold: not possessing great talent or taste, Suzor nevertheless played a huge role in the formation of a “pan-European” style, characteristic of ordinary buildings in the center of St. Petersburg.
Main works in St. Petersburg: more than 60 buildings were built, mainly residential buildings. Of these, the most significant are the house complexes that belonged to Prince. Ratysov-Rozhnov (on Kirochnaya, Panteleimonovskaya and Dumskaya streets), a complex of houses on Pushkinskaya Street (almost the entire street up to the square with the monument is built up), a number of houses on Nevsky Prospekt. Of the public buildings, the most famous are the house of the Singer company (now the House of Books), the house of the Mutual Credit Society on the Ekaterininsky (Griboyedov) Canal, the Metropol Hotel on the corner of Nevsky and Vladimirsky Prospekts, the homeopathic hospital with several public baths (on Basseynaya, Bolshaya streets Pushkarskaya, on the Moika embankment), a number of industrial buildings.
de (1760.-1813)
Frenchman in Russian service: Born in Bern (Switzerland) into a noble family. Initially he studied at the Paris Academy of Arts, then in 1785 in Rome. He served with Charles de Artois (brother of Louis XVI), and from 1794 in Vienna with the prince. In 1799, on the recommendation of the ambassador in Vienna, Prince. invited to Russia as an artist. Since 1800 - academician. From 1802 - court architect, professor at the Academy of Arts in perspective, from 1810 - professor of architecture. He was also the chief artist of the imperial glass factory. While inspecting the burned Bolshoi Theater, he fell from the scaffolding and died from bruises.
A representative of classicism, following the principles of N. Ledoux.
Main works: in St. Petersburg - Grand Theatre(located on the site of the Conservatory), Exchange and layout of the Spit of Vasilyevsky Island, Salny Buyan (not preserved); in Pavlovsk - the mausoleum “To the Benefactor Spouse”; in Odessa - a theater and a hospital (not preserved).
(1794-1881)
Born in St. Petersburg into the family of a jeweler. In 1803 -1815. studied at the Academy of Arts. Remained at the Academy, in 1817 he was enrolled in the drafting department of the Committee for Buildings and Hydraulic Works. In 1819, he was sent as a pensioner to Italy, where he worked until 1828 - researching and drawing up projects for the restoration of the Sanctuary of Fortune in Praeneste, as well as the Palace of the Caesars on the Palatine; for both works he publishes statements. He also measures other monuments of ancient architecture. In 1821 he studied at the Polytechnic School in Paris. Performs a series design work. Elected member of the Academy of St. Luke, corresponding member of the Roman Archaeological Academy, professor of the Florentine Academy of Arts. Returning to St. Petersburg in 1828, he became one of the participants in the reorganization of the Academy undertaken by the President of the Academy of Arts; from 1830 - academician and professor, from 1854 - rector for architecture.
Since 1830, after the successful completion of the project for the Church of St. Catherine in St. Petersburg, he became a leading architect in Russia, carrying out the most important state orders of the government of Nicholas I. The albums of church projects he published were recommended as official samples. After the death of Nicholas I, he moved away from practical design, although in 1861 he received the title of “Architect of His Imperial Majesty.” Privy Councilor (a rank corresponding to a general); in 1868 he was elected an honorary member and correspondent of the Royal Institute of British Architects. For the last ten years of his life he was seriously ill and died in St. Petersburg.
Ton's works are notable for their high level of solving functional and constructive problems, the novelty of space-planning schemes, and a high level of composition.
His creative style, however, was somewhat dry. The connection with the ideological program of Nicholas I turned into a tragedy for Ton’s creative heritage: most of his works were destroyed; His name was usually associated with the epithets “reactionary”, “unprincipled”, “chauvinistic”, etc. Currently, justice has been restored to this master.
His merits in creating the neo-Russian style, which was based, in addition to the government order, on research into the medieval architecture of Byzantium and Rus', were recognized.
The largest architect of the mid-19th century. A characteristic representative of the eclectic era, the founder of the “national” trend in architecture; teacher who had a great influence on the formation of architectural thought in the 19th century.
The main buildings: in St. Petersburg - a pier with sphinxes near the Academy of Arts, state halls and a church in the Academy building, the Church of St. Catherine and three regimental churches (not preserved), the Nikolaevskaya railway station (Moskovsky); in Moscow - the Cathedral of Christ the Savior (not preserved), the Grand Kremlin Palace and the Armory, the Nikolaevskaya Railway station (Leningradsky), the bell tower of the Simonov Monastery (not preserved), the Maly Theater, etc.; in Kazan - the house of the military governor in the Kremlin; cathedrals and churches in Krasnoyarsk, Tomsk, Saratov, Tsarskoye Selo (not preserved), Peterhof, Yaransk, Sevastopol, Sveaborg, Yelets, etc. In addition, Ton carried out restoration work (including the construction of new facilities) in the Ipatiev Monastery near Kostroma, in Moscow The Kremlin, in Izmailovo near Moscow, etc.
Trezzini Domenico Giovani (Andrey Yakimovich) (1670-1734)
Italian, originally from Switzerland. Studied in Italy. From 1699 he worked in Denmark, from where in 1708 he was invited by the ambassador to Russian service as a fortifier. In 1704-1705 worked in Kronstadt, in 1705-1706 - in Narva, from 1706 until the end of his life - in St. Petersburg.
Being the closest assistant to Peter I, he actually headed all construction in St. Petersburg. In 1726 he received the rank of colonel of fortification. The first architect of St. Petersburg. Trezzini's works largely determined the further development of the city and anticipated its appearance.
Main works: Peter and Paul Fortress with Peter's Gate, St. Peter and Paul; palaces of Peter I - Summer (?) and Winter (not preserved), the building of 12 colleges (university), a hospital on the Vyborg side (rebuilt), his own house on the Universitetskaya settlement, a development project for Vasilievsky Island, projects of “model” houses.
(1792-1870)
Born in Moscow in the family of an officer. Graduated from the Moscow Architectural School. In 1817-1819 in the rank of architect's assistant he worked for D. Gilardi and in the expedition of the Kremlin building. Participated in the competition for the design of the Grand Kremlin Palace. He worked mainly on the reconstruction of Moscow and Moscow University. Reached a high official position. He is known as a collector of paintings, which he bequeathed to the Rumyantsev Museum.
Main works: park structures, theater and palace interiors on the Yusupov estate Arkhangelskoye, reconstruction and additions at Moscow University, reconstruction of the Church of the Annunciation in Elokhov (Yelokhovo Cathedral).
, prince (1719-1775)
From the oldest impoverished princely family. Born in the village. Semyonovsky near Poshekhony. After graduating from the School of Mathematical and Navigational Sciences in 1733, he was assigned to the “team”, and from 1741 - to the Moscow “team”. In 1742 he received the title of “Gesel”, in 1745 - the title of architect, became the chief architect of Moscow and led his own “team”. From 1750 he headed the architectural school he organized, among his students were A. Kokorinov, M. Kazakov, A. Evlashev, and other major architects. He carried out a huge amount of work with his students on measuring and strengthening the buildings of the Moscow Kremlin, monuments of Novgorod, Uglich, etc.
The largest architect, master of the Baroque mid-18th century. Chief architect of Moscow for a quarter of a century.
For the first time in Russia, he organized systematic training of architectural personnel.
Main works: in Moscow - triumphal gates - Tverskaya and Krasnye, stone Kuznetsky bridge, house (Neskuchnoye), projects of the Hospital and Invalid houses, as well as the Resurrection triumphal gates (not implemented), the Church of St. Nikita on Basmanskaya street. (?), restoration of the bell tower of Ivan the Great, reconstruction of the All Saints Bridge, completion of the bell tower of the Trinity-Sergius Lavra, the bell tower in Tver (together with I. Schumacher) is the only surviving building.
Felten Georg Friedrich (Yuri Matveevich) (1730-1801)
Born in St. Petersburg into the family of an official at the Academy of Sciences. He studied at the gymnasium at the Academy. In 1744 he left for Germany. Studied at the University of Tübingen. He took part in the construction of a residence in Stuttgart. In 1749 he returned to Russia. In 1749-1751 studied at the Academy of Arts with Schumacher. Court architect, from 1783 - correspondent of the French Royal Academy, from 1784 - state councilor, from 1770 - academician, in 1772 - professor at the Academy of Arts, in 1785 - adjunct rector, in 1789-1794 - Director of the Academy of Arts. In 1794 he retired.
Possessing modest talent, Felten was extremely prolific and hardworking; had good taste. A classicist of the first generation, he paid tribute to the fascination with “Gothic” stylizations.
Main works in St. Petersburg: Old Hermitage, Chesme Palace and Church of John the Baptist (Chesmenskaya) behind the Moscow Gate, Alexander Orphan Institute near Smolny, Protestant churches of St. Catherine on Vasilyevsky Island and St. Anna on Kirochnaya Street, Armenian-Gregorian Church on Nevsky Prospect, the lattice of the Summer Garden (presumably).
(1872-1936)
Born in Orel in the family of a postal official. He spent his childhood in Riga, where he graduated from high school.
Main works: spatial structural system in the form of a mesh vault (a number of industrial buildings); a structural system in the form of a hanging mesh metal covering (pavilions of the Nizhny Novgorod exhibition of 1896); hyperboloid “Shukhov towers” (lighthouses, water towers, radio towers) made of metal rods, spatial structures in the form of arched trusses; participation in the design of the Upper Trading Rows, as well as the Metropol Hotel, Bryansk (Kievsky) Station, Kazansky Station, etc.
(1878-1939)
Born in Berlin in the family of an officer, he spent his childhood in Tambov, where he graduated from a real school. In 1896 he entered the Academy of Arts, studied architecture (class), painting (class), graphics (class), sculpture (sheva class). He studied the monuments of ancient Russian cities. After graduating from the Academy in 1906, he was on a retirement trip to Rome, Athens, and Constantinople; for the presented works he was again sent to Italy. In 1911 - academician of architecture. From 1910 he taught at the school of the Society for the Encouragement of Arts in St. Petersburg, and from 1913 he was the director of women's architectural courses.
Main creative activity Shchuko dates back to the post-revolutionary period, when he lived and worked in Moscow.
One of the most cultured and talented people of his time, before the revolution, he was a prominent representative of neoclassicism. Subsequently, he worked extensively and fruitfully in the field of architecture, graphics, painting, and was a major theater artist and teacher.
Main works before 1917: apartment buildings No. 63 and 65 on Kamennoostrovsky Prospect in St. Petersburg, Russian pavilions at the International Exhibitions in Rome and Turin, the building of the Kyiv Zemstvo Government, the Church of the Polytechnic Institute in Kyiv.
(1873-1949)
Born in Chisinau in seven official. He showed an ability to draw early, and after graduating from high school he entered the Academy of Arts (1891). Since 1894 - in the workshop. He took measurements of the Gur-Emir mausoleum in Samarkand. After graduating from the Academy (1897), he received the right to travel abroad and visited Italy, Tunisia, France, England, and Belgium.
He approved the report exhibition of Shchusev’s drawings.
The largest architect, before the revolution, a bright and consistent representative of the neo-Russian style; His main activity belongs to Soviet architecture, in which he occupied one of the leading places.
Main works before 1917: reconstruction of the Basil Church in Ovruch (XII century), church in New Athos, Trinity Cathedral in the Pochaev Lavra, monument church on Kulikovo Field, Martha and Mary Convent on Bolshaya Ordynka in Moscow, church in Mikhailovsky Golden-Domed Monastery in Kiev, Kazansky Station in Moscow, Russian pavilion at the XI International Exhibition in Venice.
I.M.Schmidt
The eighteenth century is a time of remarkable flowering of Russian architecture. Continuing; on the one hand, their national traditions, Russian masters during this period began to actively master the experience of contemporary Western European architecture, reworking its principles in relation to the specific historical needs and conditions of their country. They greatly enriched world architecture, introducing unique features into its development.
For Russian architecture of the 18th century. Characterized by the decisive predominance of secular architecture over religious architecture, the breadth of urban plans and solutions. A new capital was being built - St. Petersburg, and as the state strengthened, old cities were expanded and rebuilt.
The decrees of Peter I contained specific orders relating to architecture and construction. Thus, his special order prescribed that the facades of newly constructed buildings should be placed on the red line of the streets, while in ancient Russian cities houses were often located in the depths of courtyards, behind various outbuildings.
According to a number of its stylistic features, Russian architecture of the first half of the 18th century. can undoubtedly be compared with the Baroque style dominant in Europe.
Nevertheless, a direct analogy cannot be drawn here. Russian architecture - especially from the time of Peter the Great - had a much greater simplicity of form than was characteristic of the late Baroque style in the West. In its ideological content, it affirmed the patriotic ideas of the greatness of the Russian state.
One of the most remarkable buildings of the early 18th century is the Arsenal building in the Moscow Kremlin (1702-1736; architects Dmitry Ivanov, Mikhail Choglokov and Christoph Conrad). The large length of the building, the calm surface of the walls with sparsely spaced windows and the solemn and monumental design of the main gate clearly indicate a new direction in architecture. A completely unique solution is the small paired Arsenal windows, which have a semi-circular finish and huge external slopes like deep niches.
New trends also penetrated into religious architecture. A striking example of this is the Church of the Archangel Gabriel, better known as the Menshikov Tower. It was built in 1704-1707. in Moscow, on the territory of the estate of A. D. Menshikov near Chistye Prudy, by the architect Ivan Petrovich Zarudny (died in 1727). Before the fire of 1723 (caused by a lightning strike), the Menshikov Tower - like the bell tower of the Peter and Paul Cathedral in St. Petersburg, which was built shortly after - was crowned with a high wooden spire, at the end of which was a gilded copper figure of the archangel. The height of this church exceeded the bell tower of Ivan the Great in the Kremlin ( The light, elongated dome of this church, which now has a unique shape, was made already at the beginning of the 19th century. The restoration of the church dates back to 1780.).
The Menshikov Tower is characteristic of Russian church architecture of the late 17th century. a composition of several tiers - “octagons” on a “quadruple”. At the same time, compared to the 17th century. here new trends are clearly outlined and new architectural techniques are used. Particularly bold and innovative was the use of a high spire in a church building, which was then so successfully used by St. Petersburg architects. Zarudny's appeal to the classical methods of the order system is characteristic. In particular, columns with Corinthian capitals, unusual for ancient Russian architecture, were introduced with great artistic tact. And quite boldly - powerful volutes flanking the main entrance to the temple and giving it a special monumentality, originality and solemnity.
Zarudny also created wooden triumphal gates in Moscow - in honor of the Poltava victory (1709) and the conclusion of the Nystadt Peace (1721). Since the time of Peter the Great, the erection of triumphal arches has become a frequent phenomenon in the history of Russian architecture. Both wooden and permanent (stone) triumphal gates were usually richly decorated with sculpture. These buildings were monuments to the military glory of the Russian people and largely contributed to the decorative design of the city.
With the greatest clarity and completeness, the new qualities of Russian architecture of the 18th century. manifested themselves in the architecture of St. Petersburg. The new Russian capital was founded in 1703 and was built unusually quickly.
From an architectural point of view, St. Petersburg is of particular interest. It is the only capital city in Europe that emerged entirely in the 18th century. Its appearance vividly reflected not only the unique directions, styles and individual talents of the architects of the 18th century, but also the progressive principles of urban planning of that time, in particular planning. In addition to the brilliantly designed “three-beam” layout of the center of St. Petersburg, high urban planning art was manifested in the creation of complete ensembles and in the magnificent development of the embankments. From the very beginning, the indissoluble architectural and artistic unity of the city and its waterways represented one of the most important advantages and unique beauty of St. Petersburg. The formation of the architectural appearance of St. Petersburg in the first half of the 18th century. associated mainly with the activities of architects D. Trezzini, M. Zemtsov, I. Korobov and P. Eropkin.
Domenico Trezzini (c. 1670-1734) was one of those foreign architects who, having arrived in Russia at the invitation of Peter I, remained here for many years, or even until the end of their lives. The name Trezzini is associated with many buildings of early St. Petersburg; he owns “exemplary”, that is, standard designs of residential buildings, palaces, temples, and various civil structures.
Trezzini did not work alone. A group of Russian architects worked with him, whose role in the creation of a number of buildings was extremely responsible. Trezzini's best and most significant creation is the famous Peter and Paul Cathedral, built in 1712-1733. The construction is based on the plan of a three-nave basilica. The most remarkable part of the cathedral is its upward-facing bell tower. Just like Zarudny's Menshikov Tower in its original form, the bell tower of the Peter and Paul Cathedral is crowned with a high spire, topped with the figure of an angel. The proud, easy rise of the spire is prepared by all the proportions and architectural forms of the bell tower; a gradual transition from the bell tower itself to the “needle” of the cathedral was thought out. The bell tower of the Peter and Paul Cathedral was conceived and implemented as an architectural dominant in the ensemble of St. Petersburg under construction, as the personification of the greatness of the Russian state, which established its new capital on the shores of the Gulf of Finland.
In 1722-1733 Another well-known Trezzini building is being created - the building of the Twelve Colleges. Strongly elongated in length, the building has twelve sections, each of which is designed as a relatively small but independent house with its own ceiling, pediment and entrance. Trezzini’s favorite strict pilasters in this case are used to unite the two upper floors of the building and emphasize the measured, calm rhythm of the divisions of the facade. The proud, rapid rise of the bell tower of the Peter and Paul Fortress Cathedral and the calm length of the building of the Twelve Colleges - these beautiful architectural contrasts were carried out by Trezzini with the impeccable tact of an outstanding master.
Most of Trezzini's works are characterized by restraint and even rigor in the architectural design of buildings. This is especially noticeable next to the decorative pomp and rich design of buildings of the mid-18th century.
The activities of Mikhail Grigorievich Zemtsov (1686-1743), who initially worked for Trezzini and attracted the attention of Peter I with his talent, were varied. Zemtsov participated, apparently, in all of Trezzini’s major works. He completed the construction of the Kunstkamera building, begun by the architects Georg Johann Mattarnovi and Gaetano Chiaveri, built the churches of Simeon and Anna, Isaac of Dalmatia and a number of other buildings in St. Petersburg.
Peter I gave great importance regular development of the city. The famous French architect Jean Baptiste Leblond was invited to Russia to develop a master plan for St. Petersburg. However, the master plan of St. Petersburg drawn up by Leblon had a number of very significant shortcomings. The architect did not take into account the natural development of the city, and his plan suffered largely from abstraction. Leblon's project was only partially implemented in the layout of the streets of Vasilievsky Island. Russian architects made many significant adjustments to its layout of St. Petersburg.
A prominent urban planner of the early 18th century was the architect Pyotr Mikhailovich Eropkin (c. 1698-1740), who gave a remarkable solution to the three-ray layout of the Admiralty part of St. Petersburg (including Nevsky Prospekt). Carrying out a lot of work in the “Commission on St. Petersburg Building” formed in 1737, Eropkin was in charge of the development of other areas of the city. His work ended in the most tragic way. The architect was associated with the Volynsky group, which opposed Biron. Among other prominent members of this group, Eropkin was arrested and executed in 1740.
Eropkin is known not only as a practicing architect, but also as a theorist. He translated the works of Palladio into Russian, and also began work on the scientific treatise “The Position of an Architectural Expedition.” The last work concerning the main issues of Russian architecture was not completed by him; after his execution, this work was completed by Zemtsov and I.K. Korobov (1700-1747), the creator of the first stone building of the Admiralty. Topped with a tall thin spire, echoing the spire of the Peter and Paul Cathedral, the Admiralty Tower, built by Korobov in 1732-1738, became one of the most important architectural landmarks of St. Petersburg.
Definition of the architectural style of the first half of the 18th century. usually causes a lot of controversy among researchers of Russian art. Indeed, the style of the first decades of the 18th century. was complex and often very contradictory. The Western European Baroque style, somewhat modified and more restrained in form, participated in its formation; The influence of Dutch architecture also had an effect. To one degree or another, the influence of the traditions of ancient Russian architecture also made itself felt. A distinctive feature of many of the first buildings of St. Petersburg was the harsh utilitarianism and simplicity of architectural forms. The unique originality of Russian architecture in the first decades of the 18th century. lies, however, not in the complex and sometimes contradictory interweaving of architectural styles, but primarily in the urban planning scope, in the life-affirming power and grandeur of the structures erected during this most important period for the Russian nation.
After the death of Peter I (1725), the extensive civil and industrial construction undertaken on his instructions faded into the background. A new period begins in the development of Russian architecture. The best forces of architects were now directed to palace construction, which assumed an extraordinary scale. From about the 1740s. A distinct Russian Baroque style is established.
In the mid-18th century, the broad career of Bartholomew Varfolomeevich Rastrelli (1700-1771), the son of the famous sculptor K.-B. Rastrelli. The work of Rastrelli the son belongs entirely to Russian art. His work reflected the increased power Russian Empire, the wealth of the highest court circles, who were the main customers of the magnificent palaces created by Rastrelli and the team he led.
Rastrelli's activities in rebuilding the palace and park ensemble of Peterhof were of great importance. The site for the palace and an extensive garden and park ensemble, which later received the name Peterhof (now Petrodvorets), was planned in 1704 by Peter I himself. In 1714-1717. Monplaisir and the stone Peterhof Palace were built according to the designs of Andreas Schlüter. Subsequently, several architects were involved in the work, including Jean Baptiste Leblond, the main author of the layout of the park and fountains of Peterhof, and I. Braunstein, builder of the Marly and Hermitage pavilions.
From the very beginning, the Peterhof ensemble was conceived as one of the world's largest ensembles of garden structures, sculptures and fountains, rivaling Versailles. The design, magnificent in its integrity, united the Grand Cascade and the grandiose staircase descents framing it with the Large Grotto in the center and towering above the entire palace into one inextricable whole.
Without touching in this case on the complex issue of authorship and the history of construction, which was carried out after Leblond’s sudden death, it should be noted that the installation in 1735 was central in its compositional role and in ideological plan the sculptural group “Samson Tearing the Lion’s Jaw” (the authorship is not precisely established), which completed the first stage of the creation of the largest of the regular park ensembles of the 18th century.
In the 1740s. The second stage of construction in Peterhof began, when a grandiose reconstruction of the Great Peterhof Palace was undertaken by the architect Rastrelli. While maintaining some restraint in the design of the old Peterhof Palace, characteristic of the style of Peter the Great's time, Rastrelli nevertheless significantly enhanced its decorative design in the Baroque style. This was especially evident in the design of the left wing with the church and the right wing (the so-called Corps under the coat of arms) that were newly added to the palace. The final of the main stages of the construction of Peterhof dates back to the end of the 18th - the very beginning of the 19th century, when the architect A. N. Voronikhin and a whole galaxy of outstanding masters of Russian sculpture, including Kozlovsky, Martos, Shubin, Shchedrin, Prokofiev, were involved in the work.
In general, Rastrelli’s first projects, dating back to the 1730s, are largely still close to the style of Peter the Great’s time and do not amaze with that luxury
and pomp, which are manifested in his most famous creations - the Great (Catherine) Palace in Tsarskoe Selo (now the city of Pushkin), the Winter Palace and the Smolny Monastery in St. Petersburg.
Having started to create the Catherine Palace (1752-1756), Rastrelli did not rebuild it entirely. In the composition of his grandiose building, he skillfully included the already existing palace buildings of the architects Kvasov and Chevakinsky. Rastrelli combined these relatively small buildings, interconnected by one-story galleries, into one majestic building of a new palace, the facade of which reached three hundred meters in length. Low one-story galleries were built on and thereby raised to the overall height of the horizontal divisions of the palace; the old side buildings were included in the new building as protruding projections.
Both inside and outside, Rastrelli's Catherine Palace was distinguished by its exceptional richness of decorative design, inexhaustible imagination and variety of motifs. The roof of the palace was gilded, and sculptural (also gilded) figures and decorative compositions rose above the balustrade surrounding it. The façade was decorated with mighty figures of Atlanteans and intricate stucco moldings depicting garlands of flowers. The white color of the columns stood out clearly against the blue color of the walls of the building.
The interior space of the Tsarskoye Selo Palace was designed by Rastrelli along the longitudinal axis. The numerous halls of the palace, intended for ceremonial receptions, formed a solemn, beautiful enfilade. The main color combination of interior decoration is gold and White color. Abundant gold carvings, images of frolicking cupids, exquisite forms of cartouches and volutes - all this was reflected in the mirrors, and in the evenings, especially on the days of receptions and ceremonies, it was brightly lit by countless candles ( This palace of rare beauty was barbarically looted and set on fire by Nazi troops during the Great Patriotic War. Patriotic War 1941-1945 Thanks to the efforts of the masters of Soviet art, the Great Tsarskoye Selo Palace has now been restored, as far as possible.).
In 1754-1762 Rastrelli is building another large structure - the Winter Palace in St. Petersburg, which became the basis of the future ensemble of Palace Square.
In contrast to the very elongated Tsarskoye Selo Palace, the Winter Palace is designed in the form of a huge closed rectangle. The main entrance to the palace at that time was located in the spacious internal front courtyard.
Considering the location of the Winter Palace, Rastrelli designed the facades of the building differently. Thus, the facade facing south, onto the subsequently formed Palace Square, was designed with a strong plastic accentuation of the central part (where the main entrance to the courtyard is located). On the contrary, the facade of the Winter Palace, facing the Neva, is maintained in a calmer rhythm of volumes and colonnade, thanks to which the length of the building is better perceived.
Rastrelli's activities were mainly aimed at creating palace buildings. But even in church architecture he left an extremely valuable work - the design of the ensemble of the Smolny Monastery in St. Petersburg. The construction of the Smolny Monastery, which began in 1748, lasted for many decades and was completed by the architect V. P. Stasov in the first third of the 19th century. In addition, such an important part of the entire ensemble as the nine-tiered bell tower of the cathedral was never realized. In the composition of the five-domed cathedral and a number of general principles for the design of the ensemble of the monastery, Rastrelli directly proceeded from the traditions of ancient Russian architecture. At the same time, we see here character traits architecture of the mid-18th century: the splendor of architectural forms, the inexhaustible wealth of decor.
Among Rastrelli’s outstanding creations are the wonderful Stroganov Palace in St. Petersburg (1750-1754), St. Andrew’s Cathedral in Kyiv, the Resurrection Cathedral of the New Jerusalem Monastery near Moscow, rebuilt according to his design, the wooden two-story Annenhof Palace in Moscow, which has not survived to this day, and others.
If Rastrelli's activities took place mainly in St. Petersburg, then another outstanding Russian architect, Korobov's student Dmitry Vasilyevich Ukhtomsky (1719-1775), lived and worked in Moscow. Two remarkable monuments of Russian architecture of the mid-18th century are associated with his name: the bell tower of the Trinity-Sergius Lavra (1740-1770) and the stone Red Gate in Moscow (1753-1757).
By the nature of his work, Ukhtomsky is quite close to Rastrelli. Both the bell tower of the Lavra and the triumphal gates are rich in external design, monumental and festive. Ukhtomsky’s valuable quality is his desire to develop ensemble solutions. And although his most significant plans were not realized (the project of the ensemble of the Invalid and Hospital Houses in Moscow), the progressive trends in Ukhtomsky’s work were picked up and developed by his great students - Bazhenov and Kazakov.
A prominent place in the architecture of this period was occupied by the work of Savva Ivanovich Chevakinsky (1713-1774/80). A student and successor of Korobov, Chevakinsky participated in the development and implementation of a number of architectural projects in St. Petersburg and Tsarskoe Selo. Chevakinsky's talent was especially fully manifested in the St. Nicholas Naval Cathedral he created (St. Petersburg, 1753 - 1762). The slender four-tiered bell tower of the cathedral is wonderfully designed, enchanting with its festive elegance and impeccable proportions.
Second half of the 18th century. marks new stage in the history of architecture. Just like other types of art, Russian architecture testifies to the strengthening of the Russian state and the growth of culture, and reflects a new, more sublime idea of \u200b\u200bman. The ideas of citizenship proclaimed by the Enlightenment, the idea of an ideal noble state built on reasonable principles find a unique expression in the aesthetics of classicism of the 18th century, and are reflected in increasingly clear, classically restrained forms of architecture.
Since the 18th century. and until the mid-19th century, Russian architecture occupied one of the leading places in world architecture. Moscow, St. Petersburg and a number of other Russian cities are enriched at this time with first-class ensembles.
The formation of early Russian classicism in architecture is inextricably linked with the names of A. F. Kokorinov, Wallen Delamot, A. Rinaldi, Yu. M. Felten.
Alexander Filippovich Kokorinov (1726-1772) was among the direct assistants of one of the most prominent Russian architects of the mid-18th century. Ukhtomsky. As the latest research shows, the young Kokorinov built the palace ensemble in Petrovsky-Razumovsky (1752-1753), glorified by his contemporaries, which has survived to this day modified and rebuilt. From the point of view of architectural style, this ensemble was undoubtedly close to the magnificent palace buildings of the mid-18th century, erected by Rastrelli and Ukhtomsky. New, foreshadowing the style of Russian classicism, was, in particular, the use of the severe Doric order in the design of the entrance gates of Razumovsky's palace.
Around 1760, Kokorinov began his many years of joint work with Wallen Delamoth (1729-1800), who came to Russia. Originally from France, Delamote came from a family of famous architects, the Blondels. The name of Wallen Delamoth is associated with such significant buildings in St. Petersburg as the Great Gostiny Dvor (1761 - 1785), the plan of which was developed by Rastrelli, and the Small Hermitage (1764-1767). The Delamot building, known as New Holland, is a building of Admiralty warehouses, where the arch made of simple dark red brick with decorative use of white stone, spanning the canal, attracts special attention with a subtle harmony of architectural forms and solemn and majestic simplicity.
Wallen Delamoth participated in the creation of one of the most unique structures of the 18th century. - Academy of Arts in St. Petersburg (1764-1788). The austere, monumental building of the Academy, built on Vasilyevsky Island, acquired important significance in the city ensemble. The main façade facing the Neva is majestically and calmly designed. The general design of this building indicates the predominance of the style of early classicism over baroque elements.
What is most striking is the plan of this structure, which was apparently mainly developed by Kokorinov. Behind the outwardly calm facades of the building, which occupies an entire city block, hides a complex internal system of educational, residential and utility rooms, stairs and corridors, courtyards and passages. Particularly noteworthy is the layout of the Academy's courtyards, which included one huge round courtyard in the center and four smaller courtyards, rectangular in plan, with two corners rounded in each.
A building close to the art of early classicism is the Marble Palace (1768-1785). Its author was the Yang architect Antonio Rinaldi (c. 1710-1794), who was invited to Russia. In Rinaldi's earlier buildings, the features of the late Baroque and Rococo style were clearly visible (the latter is especially noticeable in the refined decoration of the apartments of the Chinese Palace in Oranienbaum).
Along with large palace and park ensembles, estate architecture is becoming increasingly developed in Russia. Particularly active construction of estates began in the second half of the 18th century, when Peter III issued a decree exempting nobles from compulsory public service. The Russian nobles, who had dispersed to their ancestral and newly acquired estates, began to intensively build and improve their landscaping, inviting the most prominent architects for this, as well as making extensive use of the labor of talented serf architects. Estate construction reached its greatest prosperity at the end of the 18th - beginning of the 19th century.
The master of early classicism was Yuri Matveevich Felten (1730-1801), one of the creators of the remarkable Neva embankments associated with the implementation of urban planning work in the 1760-1770s. The construction of the lattice of the Summer Garden, in the design of which Felten participated, is also closely connected with the ensemble of Neva embankments. Among the buildings of Velten, the building of the Old Hermitage should be mentioned.
In the second half of the 18th century. one of the greatest Russian architects, Vasily Ivanovich Bazhenov (1738-1799), lived and worked. Bazhenov was born into the family of a sexton near Moscow, near Maloyaroslavets. At the age of fifteen, Bazhenov was part of a team of painters during the construction of one of the palaces, where he was noticed by the architect Ukhtomsky, who accepted the gifted young man into his “architectural team.” After the organization of the Academy of Arts in St. Petersburg, Bazhenov was sent there from Moscow, where he studied at the gymnasium at Moscow University. In 1760, Bazhenov went abroad as a pensioner of the Academy, to France and Italy. The outstanding natural talent of the young architect already in those years received high recognition. Twenty-eight-year-old Bazhenov came from abroad with the title of professor of the Roman Academy and the title of academician of the Florence and Bologna Academies.
Bazhenov’s exceptional talent as an architect and his great creative scope were especially clearly manifested in the project of the Kremlin Palace in Moscow, on which he began working in 1767, actually planning the creation of a new Kremlin ensemble.
According to Bazhenov’s project, the Kremlin was to become, in the full sense of the word, the new center of the ancient Russian capital, and moreover, it would be most directly connected with the city. Based on this project, Bazhenov even intended to tear down part of the Kremlin wall from the Moscow River and Red Square. Thus, the newly created ensemble of several squares in the Kremlin and, first of all, the new Kremlin Palace would no longer be separated from the city.
The facade of Bazhenov’s Kremlin Palace was supposed to face the Moscow River, to which ceremonial staircases, decorated with monumental and decorative sculpture, led from above, from the Kremlin hill.
The palace building was designed to have four floors, with the first two floors having service purposes, and the third and fourth floors housing the palace apartments themselves with large double-height halls.
In the architectural design of the Kremlin Palace, new squares, as well as the most significant interior spaces, an exceptionally large role was given to colonnades (mainly of the Ionic and Corinthian orders). In particular, a whole system of colonnades surrounded the main square in the Kremlin designed by Bazhenov. The architect intended to surround this square, which had an oval shape, with buildings with strongly protruding basement parts, forming, as it were, stepped stands to accommodate people.
Extensive preparatory work began; in a specially built house, a wonderful (preserved to this day) model of the future structure was made; Bazhenov carefully developed and designed the interior decoration and decoration of the palace...
The unsuspecting architect was in for a cruel blow: as it turned out later, Catherine II did not intend to complete this grandiose construction; she started it mainly with the aim of demonstrating the power and wealth of the state during the Russian-Turkish war. Already in 1775, construction stopped completely.
In subsequent years, Bazhenov’s largest work was the design and construction of an ensemble in Tsaritsyn near Moscow, which was supposed to be the summer residence of Catherine II. The ensemble in Tsaritsyn is a country estate with an asymmetrical arrangement of buildings, executed in a distinctive style, sometimes called “Russian Gothic,” but to a certain extent based on the use of motifs from Russian architecture of the 17th century.
It is in the traditions of ancient Russian architecture that Bazhenov combines the red brick walls of Tsaritsyn buildings with details made of white stone.
The surviving Bazhenov buildings in Tsaritsyn - the Opera House, the Figured Gate, the bridge across the road - give only a partial idea of the general plan. Not only was Bazhenov’s project not implemented, but even the palace he had almost completed was rejected by the visiting empress and, on her orders, demolished.
Bazhenov paid tribute to the emerging pre-romantic tendencies in the project of the Mikhailovsky (Engineers) Castle, which, with some changes, was carried out by the architect V. F. Brenna. Built by order of Paul I in St. Petersburg, Mikhailovsky Castle (1797-1800) was at that time a structure surrounded, like a fortress, by ditches; drawbridges were thrown across them. The tectonic clarity of the general architectural design and at the same time the complexity of the layout were combined here in a unique way.
In most of his projects and structures, Bazhenov acted as the greatest master of early Russian classicism. A remarkable creation of Bazhenov is the Pashkov House in Moscow (now the old building of the State Library named after V. I. Lenin). This building was built in 1784-1787. A palace-type structure, the Pashkov House (named after the first owner) turned out to be so perfect that both from the point of view of the urban ensemble and in terms of its high artistic merits, it took one of the first places among the monuments of Russian architecture.
The main entrance to the building was located from the front yard, where several service buildings of the palace-estate were located. Situated on a hill rising from Mokhovaya Street, Pashkov’s house faces its main façade towards the Kremlin. The main architectural mass of the palace is its central three-story building, topped with a light belvedere. There are two side two-story buildings on both sides of the building. The central building of Pashkov's house is decorated with a Corinthian order colonnade, connecting the second and third floors. The side pavilions have smooth columns of the Ionic order. The subtle thoughtfulness of the overall composition and all the details gives this structure extraordinary lightness and at the same time significance and monumentality. The true harmony of the whole, the grace of the elaboration of details eloquently testify to the genius of its creator.
Another great Russian architect who worked at one time with Bazhenov was Matvey Fedorovich Kazakov (1738-1812). A native of Moscow, Kazakov connected his creative activity even more closely than Bazhenov with Moscow architecture. Having entered the Ukhtomsky school at the age of thirteen, Kazakov learned the art of architecture in practice. He was neither at the Academy of Arts nor abroad. From the first half of the 1760s. young Kazakov was already working in Tver, where a number of buildings for both residential and public purposes were built according to his design.
In 1767, Kazakov was invited by Bazhenov as his direct assistant to design the ensemble of the new Kremlin Palace.
One of the earliest and at the same time the most significant and famous buildings of Kazakov is the Senate building in Moscow (1776-1787). The Senate building (currently the Supreme Soviet of the USSR is located here) is located inside the Kremlin not far from the Arsenal. Triangular in plan (with courtyards), one of its facades faces Red Square. The central compositional unit of the building is the Senate hall, which has a huge domed ceiling for that time, the diameter of which reaches almost 25 m. The relatively modest design of the building from the outside is contrasted with the magnificent design of the round main hall, which has three tiers of windows, a Corinthian order colonnade, a coffered dome and a rich stucco.
The next widely known creation of Kazakov is the building of Moscow University (1786-1793). This time, Kazakov turned to the common plan of a city estate in the form of the letter P. In the center of the building there is an assembly hall in the shape of a semi-rotunda with a domed ceiling. The original appearance of the university, built by Kazakov, differs significantly from the external design given to it by D.I. Gilardi, who restored the university after the fire of Moscow in 1812. The Doric colonnade, reliefs and pediment above the portico, aedicules at the ends of the side wings, etc. - all this was not in Kazakov’s building. It looked taller and less spread out along the façade. The main facade of the university in the 18th century. had a more slender and lighter colonnade of the portico (Ionic order), the walls of the building were divided by blades and panels, the ends of the side wings of the building had Ionic porticoes with four pilasters and a pediment.
Just like Bazhenov, Kazakov sometimes turned to architectural traditions in his work Ancient Rus', for example in the Petrovsky Palace, built in 1775-1782. Jug-shaped columns, arches, window decorations, hanging weights, etc., together with red brick walls and white stone decorations, clearly echoed pre-Petrine architecture.
However, most of Kazakov’s church buildings - the Church of Philip Metropolitan, the Church of the Ascension on Gorokhovskaya Street (now Kazakova Street) in Moscow, the church-mausoleum of Baryshnikov (in the village of Nikolo-Pogoreloye, Smolensk region) - were decided not so much in terms of ancient Russian churches, but in the spirit classically ceremonial secular buildings - rotundas. A special place among Kazakov’s church buildings is occupied by the unique plan of the Church of Cosmas and Damian in Moscow.
Sculptural decoration plays an important role in Kazakov’s works. A variety of stucco decorations, thematic bas-reliefs, round statues, etc. largely contributed to the high degree decoration buildings, their festive solemnity and monumentality. Interest in the synthesis of architecture and sculpture was manifested in Kazakov’s last significant building - the building of the Golitsyn Hospital (now the 1st City Hospital) in Moscow, the construction of which dates back to 1796-1801. Here Kazakov is already close to the architectural principles of classicism of the first third of the 19th century, as evidenced by the calm smooth surfaces of the wall planes, the composition of the building and its outbuildings stretched along the street, the severity and restraint of the overall architectural design.
Kazakov made a great contribution to the development of estate architecture and the architecture of urban residential mansions. Such are the house in Petrovsky-Alabino (completed in 1785) and the beautiful Gubin house in Moscow (1790s), distinguished by its clear simplicity of composition.
One of the most gifted and renowned masters of architecture of the second half of the 18th century was Ivan Yegorovich Staroy (1745-1808), whose name is associated with many buildings in St. Petersburg and the province. Starov’s largest work, if we talk about the master’s buildings that have reached us, is the Tauride Palace, built in 1783-1789. In Petersburg.
Even Starov's contemporaries highly valued this palace as meeting the high requirements of true art - it is as simple and clear in its design as it is majestic and solemn. According to the design of the interior, this is not only a residential palace-estate, but also a residence intended for ceremonial receptions, celebrations and entertainment. The central part of the palace is highlighted by a dome and a six-column Roman Doric portico, located in the depths of the front courtyard, wide open to the outside. The significance of the central part of the building is set off by the low one-story side wings of the palace, the design of which, like the side buildings, is very strict. The interior of the palace was solemnly completed. Granite and jasper columns located directly opposite the entrance make up the overall resemblance of an internal triumphal arch. From the vestibule, those who entered entered the monumentally decorated domed hall of the palace, and then into the so-called Great Gallery with a solemn colonnade consisting of thirty-six columns of the Ionic order, placed in two rows on both sides of the hall.
Even after repeated reconstructions and changes inside the Tauride Palace, made in subsequent times, the grandeur of the architect’s plan leaves an indelible impression. In the early 1770s. Starov is appointed chief architect of the “Commission on the Stone Construction of St. Petersburg and Moscow.” Under his leadership, planning projects for many Russian cities were also developed.
In addition to Bazhenov, Kazakov and Starov, at the same time many other outstanding architects are working in Russia - both Russian and those who came from abroad. The wide construction opportunities available in Russia attracted major foreign masters who did not find such opportunities in their homeland.
An outstanding master of architecture, especially palace and park structures, was a Scotsman by birth, Charles Cameron (1740s -1812).
In 1780-1786. Cameron is building a complex of garden and park structures in Tsarskoye Selo, which includes a two-story building of Cold Baths with Agate Rooms, hanging garden and finally, a magnificent open gallery that bears the name of its creator. The Cameron Gallery is one of the architect's most accomplished works. Its extraordinary lightness and grace of proportions amazes; The staircase descent is majestically and uniquely designed, flanked by copies of the ancient statues of Hercules and Flora.
Cameron was a master of interior design. With impeccable taste and sophistication, he designs the decoration of several rooms of the Great Catherine Palace (the bedroom of Catherine II, see illustration, the “Snuff Box” office), the “Agate Rooms” pavilion, as well as the Pavlovsk Palace (1782-1786) (Italian and Greek halls, billiard room and others).
Not only the palace in Pavlovsk created by Cameron, but also the entire garden and park ensemble is of great value. In contrast to the more regular planning and development of the famous Peterhof Park, the ensemble in Pavlovsk is the best example of a “natural” park with freely scattered pavilions. In the most picturesque landscape, among groves and clearings, near the Slavyanka River bending around the hills, there is a pavilion - the Temple of Friendship, an open rotunda - the Colonnade of Apollo, the pavilion of the Three Graces, an obelisk, bridges, etc.
Late 18th century in Russian architecture already in many ways precedes the next stage of development - mature classicism of the first third of the 19th century, also known as the “Russian Empire style”. New trends are noticeable in the work of Giacomo Quarenghi (1744-1817). Even in his homeland, Italy, Quarenghi became interested in Palladianism and became a zealous champion of classicism. Not finding proper use for his powers in Italy, Quarenghi came to Russia (1780), where he remained for the rest of his life.
Having started his activities with work in Peterhof and Tsarskoe Selo, Quarenghi moved on to the construction of the largest capital buildings. The Hermitage Theater (1783-1787), the building of the Academy of Sciences (1783-1789) and the Assignation Bank (1783-1790) in St. Petersburg, as well as the Alexander Palace in Tsarskoe Selo (1792-1796) created by him are strict, classical buildings in their design. , which in many ways already foreshadow the next stage in the development of Russian architecture. As a matter of fact, Quarenghi’s creative activity in Russia is almost equally divided in time between the 18th and 19th centuries. Of the most famous buildings of Quarenghi at the beginning of the 19th century. The hospital building on Liteiny Prospekt, the Anichkov Palace, the Horse Guards Manege and the wooden Narva triumphal gates of 1814 stand out.
Quarenghi's most outstanding creation of the early 19th century. is the Smolny Institute (1806-1808). This work shows the characteristic features of Quarenghi as a representative of mature classicism in architecture: the desire for large and laconic architectural forms, the use of monumental porticoes, the emphasis on the powerful basement of the building, treated with large rustication, extreme clarity and simplicity of planning.
In this article I will talk about masterpieces of foreign architecture of the 18th century.
You probably know the names of such wonderful masters as V.I. Bazhenov, M.F. Kazakov, A.F. Kokorinov. These people devoted their entire lives to architecture and created unique works art XVIII century. Without a doubt, the creations of V.I. Bazhenov, F.I. Kazakov, A.F. Kokorinov are a treasure trove of world architecture. But in this article I would like to talk about the masterpieces of foreign architecture of the 18th century.
The 18th century is the century of Enlightenment, the century of Voltaire and D. Diderot, J.-J. Rousseau and C. Montesquieu. In the 18th century, two completely new styles appeared in art - Rococo and Baroque. The ROCOCO style originated in France at the beginning of the 18th century .Translated from French, Rococo means “STONE” or “SHELL.” Characteristic features of Rococo include sophistication, a large number of different ornaments, withdrawal from the real world, immersion in fantasy, and a tendency to depict mythological subjects.
ITALY is considered the birthplace of the BAROQUE style. This style appeared at the end of the 17th and beginning of the 18th centuries. Translated from Italian, baroque means “STRANGE”, “BRANDS”. Baroque is characterized by a tendency to excess, contrast, a desire for splendor and grandeur, the unification of reality and illusion. Baroque opposes classicism and rationalism.
The largest architects of the 18th century are considered to be A. Rinaldi, C. I. Rossi, B. F. Rastrelli, D. Trezzini.
ITALIAN and ENGLISH ARCHITECTURE of the 18th century.
Baroque appeared in Italy after the Renaissance. Italian Baroque was characterized by the fluidity of complex forms, an abundance of sculptures on the facades of buildings, and the complexity of domed forms. Baroque prevailed in art only until the middle of the 18th century. Later, this bizarre style was replaced by a more rational CLASSICISM. The largest Italian F. Yuvara is considered an architect and representative of the late Baroque. It was he who created the famous Church of Superga and Palazzo Madama in Turin. Later he was invited to work in Portugal. In Lisbon, F. Yuvara built the Ajuda Palace. The architect's last works were the Oriental (Royal) Palace in Madrid ( official residence of the Spanish kings) and the country summer residence of the Spanish king Philip V - La Granja Palace. Another Italian architect L. Vanvitelli created the famous palace in Caserta. This palace was built in 1752 in the neoclassical style. Architect N. Salvi created the famous fountain di Trevi is the largest in Rome. The fountain was built from 1732 to 1762. The style of the fountain is Baroque. The Italian architect A. Galilei built the Church of San Giovanni Lateran Cathedral in Rome.
In England, Baroque did not become as widespread as in Italy. The key figures of Baroque architecture in England were J. Vanbrugh and N. Hawksmoor. The main project of J. Vanbrugh-Seaton Delaval, and the pinnacle of N. Hawksmoor's work was the Spitalfields Church of Christ.
FRENCH and PORTUGUESE ARCHITECTURE OF THE 18TH CENTURY.
The Rococo style appeared in France during the time of Philippe d'Orléans. But the greatest flowering of Rococo came during the reign of King Louis XV. The most prominent architects of that time were J. A. Gabriel and J. J. Soufflot. The most famous creation of the First Royal Architect Gabriel is considered to be the Square Concorde in Paris. The same square was named after Louis XV. J.-J. Soufflot built the Lyon Opera, the Parisian Pantheon and the treasury of Notre Dame Cathedral. A striking example of the Rococo Hotel Soubise in Paris. The hotel interior was created by the architect J. Boffrand in 1704- 1705 In the 1780s CLASSICISM became widespread in France. In the middle of the 18th century, theater mania gripped Paris. Between 1779-1782. In Paris, the ODEON theater was built according to the design of the architects C. de Wailly and M.-J. Peyre. The project of a lifetime by the French architect C. N. Ledoux is a dream city, his ideal city of Chaux.
In Portugal, Rococo appeared around 1726. One of the most significant buildings in the Portuguese Rococo style is the Palace of Queluz, the so-called “Portuguese Versailles.” The building of the Lisbon Theater of São Carlos was built in 1793. In 1750, the construction of the Necessidades Palace was completed.
GERMAN and AUSTRIAN ARCHITECTURE OF THE 18TH CENTURY.
Baroque in German architecture began to develop a hundred years later than in Italy and France. Since 1725, the French architect F. Cuvillier worked in Munich. The architect worked in the style of a blooming, lush and lush Rococo. He created the Amalienburg Pavilion in Nymphenburg. The largest architect in Germany , representative of the Baroque and Rococo I.B. Neumann created such masterpieces as the Basilica in Gosweinstein, the residence palace in Wurzburg, the Catholic Church in Gaibach. The founder of the Dresden Baroque M.D. Peppelman built it in 1711-1722. Zwinger Palace (“Citadel”). Master of Rococo interiors, German architect of the 18th century G. Knobelsdorff built the building of the opera house in Berlin (1750). But his main creation is the one-story Sans Souci Palace (palace of the Prussian king Frederick II the Great) in the royal garden of Potsdam (1745-1747)
The Austrian architect I. B. Fischer von Erlach, the founder of the Habsburg Baroque, worked for two countries: Germany and Austria. Fischer’s prominent projects were the Schönbrunn Palace, the Catholic Church of Karlskirche and the Winter Palace of Eugene of Savoy. Fischer’s younger contemporary was the Austrian architect I. L. von Hildebrandt , who worked in Vienna and Salzburg. His main buildings are Mirabell Castle, Belvedere Palace, Vienna Palace of Eugene of Savoy.
World artistic culture and art are beautiful and multifaceted. They always fascinate and amaze, with the same force and at all times, be it antiquity or pop art.
Architects of Russia in the second half of the 18th century
The second half of the 18th century in Russian history is the stabilization of the Russian political system after a protracted era of palace coups, the long-term reign of Elizabeth Petrovna and Catherine II. Classicism became the main artistic style.
Vasily Ivanovich Bazhenov(1738-1799) - a man who fully reflected the ideals, successes and failures of his era. A native of Kaluga province. The son of a village psalm-reader. He was sent to study at the Slavic-Greek-Latin Academy. He attracted attention with his successes in science. He was recommended to the Ukhtomsky school, from which all the major architects of that era came. He was friends with Fonvizin and Novikov. Studied in Paris and Rome. In St. Petersburg, Bazhenov was not fully in demand, so he moved to Moscow. There he is engaged in the repair and reconstruction of the Kremlin ensemble. This was exactly the job Bazhenov was waiting for. However, the project was not destined to be fully realized, which was a terrible blow for the architect.
Pashkov House in Moscow (1784-1786) - a structure considered the creation of Bazhenov. However, no serious documents confirming Bazhenov’s authorship have survived. Only oral rumor attributes this building to Bazhenov. This is one of the buildings of the current State Library. The house was built by order of the son of Peter the Great’s orderly. He was a quirky man, rich enough to afford an unusual project in the center of Moscow directly opposite the Kremlin. For a long time, the Pashkov House was the only place from where one could look at the Kremlin towers from above. The central volume with a columned portico and a round rotunda turret at the top, and the side wings, which, being a single part of this house, still resemble open wings, as if dissolving into the surrounding air and landscape; as if they allow this building, spread out, to breathe, live, and fly over Moscow. Brigadier Pashkov turned a small garden in front of his house into a greenhouse, into a zoo, where parrots, peacocks, and wild animals roamed in cages and at large. And people clung to the fence bars, admiring this fantastic spectacle. And the garden, and strange creatures, and the house in which the unsociable owner of all this beauty lived alone. Compositional basis The building is made up of a scheme inherent in the then estates of the landowners. Thanks to one-story galleries, the central three-story building is connected to two-story side buildings. A two-flight staircase descends from the central building down the hill. All parts of the composition are independent and complete. Pilasters serve as decoration for the walls of the house. Four-column porticoes accent the center of the main and courtyard facades. There are statues on the sides. The crown of the building is a round belvedere, which is surrounded by an Ionic colonnade. The edge of the roof is decorated with a balustrade with vases. The side buildings, where the columns of the porticoes with pediments are located, are made in the tradition of the Ionic order. Thus began the emergence of a new artistic style for Russian art - classicism.
Engineering (Mikhailovsky) castle in St. Petersburg(1780-1797). Until 1823, the castle was called Mikhailovsky and got its name from the Church of the Archangel Michael built into it. This whimsical structure has a square plan with rounded corners, into which an octagonal courtyard is inscribed. It seemed strange to contemporaries, accustomed to classicist buildings. The townspeople were surprised by the unusual treatment of the facades and the red and white color of the building, which was never used in classicism. The palace was built as an impregnable castle, surrounded by moats and drawbridges. The author of the original project was Emperor Paul I himself, who very closely followed the construction of the palace, where, by a fatal coincidence, he was killed by the conspirators.
Matvey Fedorovich Kazakov (1738-1812) Senate building in the Moscow Kremlin(1776-1787). The general plan of the building received a compact and at the same time geometric simple form triangle. It includes a courtyard, which is divided into three parts by several transverse buildings. The main facade is designed in the form of a four-column portico with a pediment. Here is the entrance to the central part of the courtyard. The round domed hall is the semantic center of the entire composition of the Senate. The colonnade, made in the tradition of the Ionic order, is located on a high rusticated plinth. It is crowned with a powerful, cracked cornice. Above it, right on the drum, is the dome of the round hall. The architect managed to organically include the Senate building into the Kremlin architectural ensemble. The originality of the composition lies in the fact that the dome of the round hall itself is on the same axis with the Senate Tower of the Kremlin Wall. The latter denotes the transverse axis of Red Square. Thus, a single harmonious image of the Kremlin emerges.
Bartolomeo Rastrelli(1700-1771), who in Russia was called in his own manner Bartholomew Varfolomeevich, the most striking figure of the mid-18th century, working in the Russian Baroque style.
Great Catherine Palace in Tsarskoe Selo(1752-1757). This building is complex in its composition, created on the site of an old palace. The building is under one roof. All buildings of the former palace have been leveled. This transforms the former galleries into a great hall and tall state apartments. Outside, the right corner of the building above the main entrance is crowned with a dome with one chapter. The five-domed church corresponds to this dome at the other end of the palace. The composition of the palace's interiors is built on the effect of an endless length of a suite of halls, living rooms and other ceremonial rooms. The grandiose palace is distinguished by its exceptional splendor of plastic and decorative work. Its facades are full of rich stucco decorations. And the paint of the building is based on a combination of intense of blue color walls, white - architectural details, gilding - sculptures and domes.
Winter Palace in St. Petersburg(1754-1762). This building is the apotheosis of the Baroque style. The plan is a simple square with a courtyard. Its facades face the Neva, the Admiralty and Palace Square. The facades of the palace form like folds of an endless ribbon. The architect solves each facade in his own way, varying the lush decoration and the changing rhythm of the column. The stepped cornice follows all the breaks in the walls. The size of the building is enormous - it has more than a thousand rooms, arranged in enfilades, decorated with carvings, moldings and gilding. The main staircase is one of the most luxurious interiors of the Winter Palace. It occupies a huge space the entire height of the building. The lampshade depicting the gods of Olympus creates a bright colorful accent. The interiors designed by Rastrelli always had a purely secular character. This is the decision of the large church of the Winter Palace. Its interior is like a large palace ceremonial hall, divided into three parts. The central part ended with a magnificent carved iconostasis.
Peterhof. The main importance here is the fountains and the water itself. They are driven by the natural pressure of water supplied from the Ropshin heights. According to the artist Alexandre Benois, Peter was building the residence of the king of the seas. Fountains are a symbolic expression of the watery kingdom, clouds and splashes of the sea that splashes off the shores of Peterhof. The system of fountains and water cascades is decorated with numerous sculptures. The Samson fountain was made by the outstanding sculptor Kozlovsky.
J. B. Vallin-Delamot and A. F. Kokorinov. Academy of Arts(1764-1788). It occupies a total of an entire block on the Neva embankment. The building follows a strict plan, which is represented by a circle inscribed in it. The circle is intended to serve as a yard for walking. The building is equally high and consists of four floors. They are divided in pairs and form the load-bearing part of the building, as well as its lightweight top. It is impossible not to feel the spirit of the times in the fundamentally new solution of the ornament - strict and geometric. The attitude towards the traditional order system is also becoming more canonical.
Ivan Egorovich Starov (1745-1808) - another architect who worked within the framework of classicism. He owns the Tauride Palace, built for the favorite of Empress Catherine II - His Serene Highness Prince Potemkin-Tavrichesky. The construction itself marked the fact of his victory over the Ottoman Turks. The palace took six years to build and was completed in 1789. The lobby was decorated with yakhont and granite pillars. In the domed hall there were faience Dutch ovens, decorated with azure and gold. In the center there was a huge Catherine's hall - the Winter Garden. The Empress herself loved to be here. International receptions were held and luxurious balls were held. At the palace there was a greenhouse in which watermelons, melons, and peaches were grown all year round. Emperor Paul gave the palace to the Horse Guards. The parquet was dismantled and taken to the Mikhailovsky Castle, which was under construction. It was here that the State Duma was first established in 1906.
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