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dc.contributor.authorDmitrieva-Einhorn, Marina-
dc.date.accessioned2011-09-15T18:04:42Z-
dc.date.available2011-09-15T18:04:42Z-
dc.date.issued2011-09-15T18:04:42Z-
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/2451/30265-
dc.description.abstractThe development of wartime technologies had a stimulating effect on architecture in Europe and the United States. The war left its traces not just in the shape of heavy edifices such as bunkers, or fortifications like the Atlantic Wall or monuments like the Line of Glory on the frontiers of the Reich, but its legacy also stimulated experiments in temporary and civil architecture. This was particularly visible in the use of new materials and lightweight constructions, which were implemented not only in military construction, such as Pier Luigi Nervi's hangars, but also in residential housing, ranging from barracks, to communal housing, and single family homes. Focusing on the impact of the war on the style of Soviet civic architecture, I shall analyse the wartime projects of the Soviet architect Andrei Konstantinovich Burov (1900-1957). A graduate of Vkhutemas, Burov began his carrier as a constructivist. He produced modernist set designs for the theatre and the cinema (among others, for Eisenstein’s film 'The old and the new'//'General line'). But in the history of Soviet architecture he is best known as the architect of classical Stalinist residential houses in Moscow rather than as a modernist. In fact, in the 1930s he preached down the constructivist school and promoted the classical tradition in architecture. During the war, however, Burov turned his attention to much more innovative projects, uniting the contradictory directions of his earlier career. His wartime designs were based on new materials applied to future dwellings, originally inspired by wartime technologies, which embodied a utopian dream of a new architecture healing the world. This new turn in his work was reflected in his extravagant project of a reconstruction of the Black Sea resort of Yalta, which was damaged during the war. Burov invented and developed the so-called 'anisotropic' technologies for prefabricated architecture, which were equally suited for residential housing, such as his designs of typified small storey houses for the Southern regions of Russia, and for large buildings of museums and exhibition halls, as exemplified in his projects for the War Monuments in Stalingrad. However, none of Burov's wartime projects was realized. In analyzing Burov's visions and theoretical concepts of architecture, this paper seeks to show a discrepancy between technological achievements, pragmatic needs and ideological tasks, which was characteristic for the architecture of the late Stalinism. In doing so, it encourages viewing Soviet architecture of the post-war period in a more differentiated manner. Soviet architects, the paper argues, found a variety of answers to the new challenge posed by wartime architecture. As such it required a response both on the level of technology and in the ideological interpretation of the role of architecture in Soviet society--a response that, however, mostly remained a unrealised project.en
dc.description.sponsorshipConference co-organized by the Institute of Fine Arts; Canadian Centre for Architecture, Montreal; and Princeton University's School of Architecture.en
dc.language.isoenen
dc.rightsCopyright Marina Dmitrieva-Einhorn, 2009.en
dc.subjectarchitectureen
dc.subjectSoviet Russiaen
dc.subjectBurov, Andrei Konstantinovichen
dc.subjectWorld War IIen
dc.titleWar as a Challenge to Architecture. Andrei Burov's Civic Designs at the Time of World War IIen
dc.typeDocumenten
Appears in Collections:Front to Rear: Architecture and Planning during World War II, March 7-8, 2009

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