The All-Russian and Soviet Art Thread

i adore shostakovich, :crush: :crush:
thanks for posting flyingace :flower:

some soviet brutalist architecture :evil:


Polytechnic University (Minsk, Belarus, 1981)



Wedding Palace (Tbilisi, Georgia, 1985)


“Roads Ministry” (Tbilisi, Georgia, 1975)


“Soviet Palace” (Kalinigrad, Russia, 1975)


“Druzhba Holiday Center Hall” (Yalta, Ukraine, 1984)

source: pingmag.jp

I really like those buildings...!!!
Brutalism is mostly inspired by Le Corbusier.... I didn't really know the russian versions....
And in the Vogue Paris May 2008, you can see La Cité Radieuse.... the one with Ann Catherine....

scanned by berlinrocks

kind of off-topic... sorry!:blush:
 
I really like those buildings...!!!
Brutalism is mostly inspired by Le Corbusier.... I didn't really know the russian versions....
And in the Vogue Paris May 2008, you can see La Cité Radieuse.... the one with Ann Catherine....

scanned by berlinrocks

kind of off-topic... sorry!:blush:
What is brutalism ??
 
What is brutalism ??
Brutalism is a type of architectural style that rose from the modernist architectural movement. I forgot the original French name but it is translates to "raw concrete." And Brutalist buildings are formed with repetitive angular shapes, which reveal the textures of the forms used to mold the materials, which usually consists of concrete.

That's modified from one of my art history books.
 
I viewed this collection on TV one evening and was astounded at the amount of Russian art this foudation inherited from the Post family. Her husband was a US ambassador to the Soviet Union right after the fall of the Russian Empire.

http://trio.hillwoodmuseum.org/art.php
 
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^ Kak zhe klassno! That sounds like it'd be a neat experience.
 
Great thread, Russia has a rich history of art and culture

The Amber Room was an intricately crafted chamber decoration taken by the Nazis in WWII. Treasure hunters have searched land and sea for the room ever since.
A duplicate was completed in 2003.

Here is the only original color photo

oldamberroomzj6.jpg

wikipedia

more information from Russia Today
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZaeoXWpwmDQ
 
The Amber Room was an intricately crafted chamber decoration taken by the Nazis in WWII. Treasure hunters have searched land and sea for the room ever since.
A duplicate was completed in 2003.

Wowwww, that's quite a story...and an incredibly decorated room!
 
VOGUE UK January 2007: "WHITE NIGHTS" photographed by TIM WALKER, fashion by KATE PHELAN
starring SASHA PIVOVAROVA
Part 1




pivovarovist.eu.tt
 
Kizhi (Кижи) is an island on Lake Onega in the Republic of Karelia (Medvezhyegorsky District), Russia with a beautiful ensemble of wooden churches, chapels and houses. It is one of the most popular tourist destinations in Russia and an UNESCO World Heritage Site.

569481926_189f57bbb6.jpg

donnacorless @ flickr

613831598_42393182b3.jpg

dmitryku @ flickr

Kizhi island is about 7 km long and 0.5 km wide. It is surrounded by about 5,000 other islands, most of which are very small—some of them just rock outcroppings (called "skerries"), though some are as big as 35 km long. Access to Kizhi is by hydrofoil across Lake Onega from Petrozavodsk (numerous trips every day in the summer), by snowcat (in the winter), or by cruise ship. There is no lodging on Kizhi for overnight guests.

2300698759_10d1493dbd.jpg

2301491636_dc933bec78.jpg

Butch O. @ flickr

The Kizhi Pogost, as it is known in Russian, is the area inside the perimeter wall or fence and includes 2 large churches and a bell-tower. But the entire island of Kizhi is a museum with many historically significant and beautiful wooden and log structures including windmills, chapels, boat- and fish-houses, saunas, barns and graneries, and homes. There are two small villages on the island that are home to a few local fishermen. Museum staff also live in the old log homes found in these villages.

243826007_d94d74cc72.jpg

svetikk2000 @ flickr

The jewel of its architecture is the 22-domed Transfiguration Church (1714), with a large iconostasis—a wooden screen covered with religious portraits, featuring much gold leaf. This iconostasis is in Petrozavodsk until restoration of the Transfiguration Church is completed (scheduled completion is 2014, the 300th anniversary of this monumental church). The massive Transfiguration Church (also known as the "summer church") is about 30m tall, making it one of the tallest log structures in the world. The smaller, nine-domed Intercession Church (also known as the "winter church") was built in 1764, and its iconostasis is intact and can be seen by visitors. The third structure inside the Pogost is the belltower which was built in 1874. The belltower is also constructed with walls of horizontally-fitted logs, though they are covered by exterior wooden planks and cannot be seen. These structures were erected without any nails or other metal, and were made of scribe-fitted horizontal logs, with interlocking corner joinery—either round notch or dovetail—cut by axes. The pine trees used for wall construction were brought to Kizhi from the mainland nearby—a notable transport feat for the 18th century.

[wikipedia]
 
i thought it was a prop created by british vogue :sideways:
 
WOW, it sure is. It reminds me of all the old fairytales. Oh good old days.
 
oh, dont get me started on russian fairtales. they were like my second breast-feed. :shock:
mine was called "krasota bezgranichnaya" ("the immense beauty") :heart:
:lol:
 

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