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Moscow: Soviet Mosaics from 1935 to 1990: Art for Architecture

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Moscow: Soviet Mosaics from 1935 to 1990: Art for Architecture

Contributors:

By (Author) James Hill
By (author) Anna Petrova
By (author) Evgeniya Kudelina

ISBN:

9783869220680

Publisher:

DOM Publishers

Imprint:

DOM Publishers

Publication Date:

1st December 2022

Country:

Germany

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Main Subject:
Other Subjects:

Ceramics, mosaic and glass: artworks

Dewey:

738.52094731

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

420

Dimensions:

Width 135mm, Height 245mm

Description

Monumental mosaics were created throughout the USSR, but they played a special role in its capital.

While in other Soviet cities and republics monumental mosaics became common in the 1960s, in Moscow mosaic was used for art-deco works and social realist pictures. The entire history of Soviet art is thus reflected in Moscows metro stations, palaces of culture, military museums, hospitals, schools, and prefabricated houses. Today, many of these works are disappearing before our eyes, victims of destruction or dismantling; the majority are not listed as under state protection, and a great number of their authors are unknown.

This book collects 140 Soviet-era mosaics and arranges them in chronological order. It contains four main sections Art Deco, Socialist Realism, Modernism, and Postmodernism and includes a list of 295 mosaics that have been identified. This guide shows well-known works by Aleksander Deyneka, Pavel Korin, Boris Chernyshev, Evgeny Ablin, Yury Korolev, and Leonid Polishchuk side by side with mosaics by artists whose names were for a long time absent from the history of art and architecture. The idea for it came from American photographer James Hill, who spent three years seeking out and photographing works of Soviet monumental art that have not received the attention they deserve and that in the post-Soviet period have often been dismissed as propaganda.

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