www.nytimes.com/2005/05/1...OSCOW.html
May 15, 2005
Russian Icons
By NICOLAI OUROUSSOFF
A short walk from the Kremlin, the Shchusev State Museum of Architecture is a haunted place. Paint is peeling off the once-elegant neo-Classical facade. An entire wing of the complex of 17th- and 18th-century buildings is partly abandoned -- because they're too expensive to heat during the long Russian winter. Yet the museum contains one of the world's best collections of architectural artifacts: everything from an elaborate model of a palace once planned for Catherine the Great to Ivan Leonidov's mythic drawings for the People's Commissariat of Heavy Industry. (Had the latter been built, it would have towered above Red Square.) In many ways, these archives represent the city's architectural conscience, a treasury of what Moscow lost and what it could have been during one of the more violent centuries in Russian history.
For the past five years, the keeper of that conscience has been David Sarkisyan, a former pharmacology researcher and documentary filmmaker. When I saw him this spring, he was in his second-story office meeting with Natalia Dushkina, the granddaughter of a well-known Stalin-era architect, Aleksei Dushkin. Dushkina, a petite 50-year-old professor at the Moscow Institute of Architecture, looked as if she might soon be swallowed up by the piles of books and knickknacks- old issues of Russian magazines, photos of forgotten architects, a porcelain bust of Napoleon -that cluttered the room.
Dushkina was outlining her plan for an international preservation conference to be held next year. In the past few years, the city has demolished a number of landmark buildings, including an Art Deco department store, the 1970's-era Intourist Hotel and the Moscow Hotel, built in 1936 at the height of Stalin's dictatorship. Moscow's outspoken mayor, Yuri Luzhkov, has spearheaded the city's transformation, knocking down buildings to make way for an ancient, fairy-tale version of Russia.
Dushkina was concerned about the legacy of the Soviet avant-garde, the buildings designed in the 15 or so years following the 1917 October revolution, perhaps the most fertile period in Russian architectural history. These buildings range from the expressionistic forms of architects like Konstantin Melnikov to the machine-inspired, functionalist structures of the Constructivists. They are stunning for their eclecticism, yet they were united by an unfaltering optimism. The goal was to overthrow centuries of cultural history and to replace that past with an architectural order that would embody the values of a new, modern society.
As I spoke with Sarkisyan, the granddaughter of Konstantin Melnikov, Ekaterina Melnikov, a stout 64-year-old with a mop of gray hair, waited just outside his office. She had come to try to persuade Sarkisyan to intervene in a family dispute over her grandfather's landmark house, completed in 1929. The house, with its twin concrete cylinders, pierced by rows of hexagonal windows, evokes both a medieval monastery and the grain silos of the American Midwest -- a favorite theme of European Modernists, who celebrated silos as the great cathedrals of the industrial age.
Melnikov's 90-year-old son, Viktor, who still lives there, wants to donate the house to the state and preserve it as a museum. Viktor's daughter Ekaterina was there to plead her father's case. Her sister Elena claims that the property legally belongs to her. Sarkisyan worries that she might eventually sell it and that a new owner could tear it down.
Both Viktor and Ekaterina have suggested that the museum could be operated as a branch of the Shchusev, which controls a large portion of the architect's archives. Sarkisyan is obviously intrigued by the idea -- the house is one of Melnikov's most beloved buildings. But given that Moscow's various landmark groups are essentially powerless, the fate of this 1929 masterpiece will be decided simply as a matter of property law.
For Sarkisyan, a stocky, animated man who at one point gestured so wildly that a cigarette flew out of his hand, the story of Melnikov's house is simply part of a longer cycle of destruction, one set in motion, in part, by the very architects of the Soviet avant-garde, who had little use for the past. Their vision, in turn, was stamped out after a little more than a decade by Stalin, who saw in their creative fervor a threat to state authority. Moscow has been a city trapped in an endless process of historical revisionism. Since the fall of Communism, things have only become worse.
Consider, for example, the Cathedral of Christ the Savior. Built to commemorate Alexander I's victory over Napoleon, the original cathedral was demolished by Stalin in the early 1930's to make room for the Palace of Soviets. Some of the world's most celebrated architects -- from Le Corbusier to Walter Gropius, a founder of the Bauhaus -- competed for the commission, which would house the new Soviet government. Stalin's selection, an ornate monumental tower by Boris Iofan, sounded the final unavoidable death knell for the Soviet avant-garde. Its gargantuan form, capped by a 200-foot-high statue of Lenin, would have been the tallest structure in the world, casting a shadow across much of the city.
Yet not even Stalin could control history completely, and his megalomaniac architectural dream was soon derailed by the onset of World War II. The site lay barren until the late 1950's, when Nikita Khrushchev ordered the construction of a vast outdoor swimming pool. A full 200 meters in diameter, the pool was heated year round and as perfect an emblem of the progressive values of the cold-war era as Iofan's design had been of authoritarian power. Its towering diving platforms and sparkling water -- shown in an old Soviet promotional film with a ring of synchronized swimmers -- evoke a patch of postwar suburbia as imagined by the Kremlin.
That pool, too, was ripped out during the waves of nationalism and nostalgia that followed the collapse of Communism -- to make room for a new version of the cathedral. ''When they wanted to rebuild the cathedral,'' Sarkisyan said, ''the architects from Mikhail Posokhin's office came to us. We had all the drawings in our archives. They used the exact plan, but all of the details are wrong: they put the church in the wrong spot, it is clad in a veneer of marble instead of limestone, the reliefs are in fake bronze instead of plaster. It could not be more tasteless.'' Capped by a fake gold dome, it would look at home on the Vegas strip.
''This is the most dangerous tendency in Moscow,'' Dushkina says. ''They have created this cycle between destruction and reconstruction and restoration. We are losing the authentic quality of the city. And the worst part is that these are professional architects. They don't want to lose work.''
On a chilly morning a few days after my visit to Sarkisyan's office, I joined Maxim Kourennoi at Moisei Ginzburg's famed Narkomfin housing block. Kourennoi, a lanky 30-year-old architect, became obsessed with the works of the Constructivists as a young graduate student. In the early 1970's, buildings like Narkomfin became pilgrimage sites for many young European architects who came of age in the shadow of the radical student uprisings of 1968 -- the Rem Koolhaases and Zaha Hadids of the world. Part of the pull of the Soviet avant-garde lay in its romantic appeal. Crushed by Stalin in its infancy, this architecture represented a dream that was never fulfilled and provided a convenient way to rebel against European Modernism without abandoning all its tenets. But the works' hold on the contemporary imagination runs deeper than that. It has to do with the scale of its ambitions. In the early years of the Soviet Union, many believed that architecture could function as a tool of social transformation. It was a time when architecture -- and the ideas it expressed -- still felt dangerous.
Ginzburg was one of Modernism's most expansive thinkers, and Narkomfin, built for the Soviet ministry of finance at the end of the 1920's, was his first major experiment in communal living. The main facade's long horizontal bands of glass and concrete were an early expression of Modernism's faith in the emerging machine age. Inside, the building had wide corridors, a shared dining area and a vast gymnasium -- all designed to encourage social interaction.
Today the building is a wreck. Many of the windows are boarded up; birds nest between the exposed concrete bricks where large chunks of the facade have fallen off. Only about 20 families live there now; most of the apartments are either abandoned or used for storage. In the corridors, the water pipes leak and some of the electrical wiring is exposed. Even so, you can detect the delicacy of Ginzburg's vision. The building is arranged as a complex system of interlocking apartments, in contrast to the uniformity of the facade. And despite the communal dining area, most apartments are equipped with a small kitchen to provide a bit of privacy.
Nor was Ginzburg naive about the limits of the revolution's social rhetoric. Most high-level officials lived in the building's upper floors. One of the movement's most important patrons, Nikolai Miliutin, the minister of finance and an architectural theorist in his own right, had the penthouse. Yet even this is a modest space. The care with which Ginzburg balanced utopian idealism and human reality makes this one of his most compelling works. It is a vision that is as perfect an expression of Constructivism's ideals, say, as Palladio's Villa Rotonda was of the values of 16th-century humanism.
Kourennoi, who has made saving the landmark his own personal crusade, is one of several young architects trying to interest either a preservation group or a private patron in restoring the building, so far with no luck. At one point, government officials -- probably sniffing out a way to profit from the site -- suggested tearing the building down and rebuilding it with additional floors. More recently, these same officials claimed that the government lacks the money to do anything at all. Meanwhile, they are essentially allowing the building to rot away.
If Ginzburg was the Soviet avant-garde's most potent intellectual voice, Melnikov was the opposite: a lone wolf known for the originality of his designs, whose dynamic forms were packed with emotion. Colleagues often condemned this approach as bourgeois formalism. Internationally, he was a star by the mid-1920's. He is now most celebrated for the half-dozen workers' clubs he designed in a sudden creative outburst at the end of the decade.
Of those that survived, the most evocative is his 1927 Rusakov Club. Seen from across Strominka Street, its cantilevered concrete bays jut out above the entry. Though workers were applying a coat of paint when I was there, the repairs were merely superficial. The club has been completely gutted, and inside it is virtually impossible to make out the configuration of the original theater. Across town, Melnikov's 1927 Kauchuk club has been redecorated in a grotesque pastiche of neo-Classical pilasters and granite staircases that suggest a Stalin-era bordello, and his 1929 Burevestnik factory club is now a private health club with a Zen fountain.
Only Melnikov's own house has so far survived relatively intact. The house was renovated by the city in the mid-1990's, but there are already cracks in the walls and, since it was improperly sealed, water leaks into the basement. Melnikov's spartan concrete bed platforms, which once gave the master bedroom the look of a monastic cell, were torn out decades ago -- not even 90-year-old Viktor seems to remember exactly when. Today Viktor's oil paintings adorn most of the walls. A black-and-white photo of his father is propped in an armchair in the dining room. The photo depicts Melnikov in a white skullcap, his small face above an emaciated frame set in monastic reverie.
In February, Viktor, frail, thin and nearly blind, gave a news conference sitting next to his father's portrait and made a plea for the government to intervene on his behalf. He said he hoped the house would be preserved virtually as it is now -- with his paintings on the wall -- as a monument to his relationship with his father. The announcement garnered brief attention in the local press but was otherwise ignored.
Just as Stalin loved to rewrite history, few of his architectural achievements have been spared. Last year, it was the Moscow Hotel, a landmark of Stalinist architecture designed by Aleksei Shchusev, who was also the director of the state architecture museum in the 40's. (The museum was renamed after him soon after his death.)
Shchusev was to Moscow what Philip Johnson was to New York: an aesthete who had little interest in architecture's symbolic meaning or social mission -- he once said he was as comfortable working for Bolsheviks as he had been for Orthodox priests. Like Johnson, Shchusev dabbled in virtually every style of his epoch, designing traditional Orthodox churches, a neo-Classical train station and Constructivist monuments like Lenin's granite Mausoleum.
Built between 1934 and 1936, at the height of Stalin's murderous purges, the Moscow Hotel did not rank among Shchusev's best works. Even so, it occupied a significant place in the city's history. Its brooding, vaguely Modern form, embellished with classical references, ornate columns and coffered ceilings, hinted at the struggle of Soviet architects to adapt to Stalin's aesthetic whims. (The hotel's famously mismatched towers were rumored to have been caused by a slip of Stalin's pen, which led him to pick two rival versions of the design.)
In a twist that Stalin might have admired, Luzkhov announced, not long after the demolition was complete, that the hotel would be rebuilt in exactly the same style, only with upgraded facilities and brighter colors. Like the new version of the cathedral, the new version of the hotel would include underground parking -- something that has become an obsession of Moscow's city planners. (Among the few things salvaged from the original hotel were the brass doorknobs, which now adorn the galleries of Sarkisyan's museum.) ''Under Stalin,'' Sarkisyan remarked, ''at least the people who were fulfilling the orders were cultured architects, they had some taste. Their buildings were not so awful as today. But of course it is all a crime.''
The primary motive behind such schemes is money. The privatization efforts of the 90's placed most of the land here in the hands of the city government. The system is now so rife with conflicts of interest that it is virtually impossible to disentangle them. Government architects who have a say in preservation issues are also vying for lucrative government contracts. And Elena Baturina, the billionaire wife of Moscow's mayor, controlled one of the country's largest cement and construction companies. In this climate, saving the city's architectural history is rarely a top priority.
Natalia Dushkina, whose conference will cover this period as well, actually lives in a Stalinist high-rise designed by her grandfather. The rooms are crammed with dark wood furniture and her father's paintings, including historical depictions of various monasteries. At the end of a corridor is a former maid's room -- a reminder that Dushkina was raised as a child of the Soviet elite.
As two dogs lay wheezing in the corner, Dushkina ticked off the number of her grandfather's buildings that are in disrepair. The Mayakovsky Metro Station -- whose vaulted interior is one of the city's most celebrated public spaces -- has been damaged by water leaks. A Stalin-era department store her father designed with Beaux Arts arcades was bought by a Russian development company and, she fears, may soon be gutted.
But generally, the grand monuments of the Stalinist era are both in better shape than their Modernist counterparts and are more highly revered. To the average Muscovite, the wonderfully ornate underground Metro stations, which were stripped of their Stalinist statues under Khrushchev, remain symbols of civic pride. High-rise apartments like Dushkina's are now coveted by Moscow's rising middle class.
The least loved of Moscow's buildings may well be those erected in the 60's and 70's. The mayor of Moscow, Yuri Luzhkov, recently announced that the city was planning to demolish the 70's-era Rossiya Hotel. The public response was generally one of relief. A colossal concrete-and-steel structure near Red Square, the hotel was once legendary among foreign tourists for its endless warrens of rooms and infestations of cockroaches and listening devices. Not surprisingly, the city plans to replace it with an equally gargantuan hotel-retail-commercial development in prerevolutionary style.
Grigory Revzin, an architecture critic who writes for the liberal newspaper Kommersant and is one of the city's most vocal preservation advocates, told me that Alexander Kuzmin, Moscow's chief architect, made the announcement on a TV talk show. ''The first question from the audience was when were they going to demolish the 1961 Palace of Congresses inside the Kremlin.''
Dushkina says: ''The hotel is not a masterpiece of architecture. But I prefer to have a monster of the 70's than something badly built by some foreigner in a neo-historical style. . . . In the same way, there is no plan to destroy the Palace of Congresses, but I think this is the dream of the general public as well. They have no idea what history is. In the past 10 years, we have built up this strong feeling that life exists only in money. It is the most horrible thing that happens to people.''
In many ways, the planned demolition of the Rossiya is similar to efforts in Berlin to demolish the Palace of the Republic and replace it with a reproduction of the 17th-century Stadtschloss. The buildings conjure associations that many would prefer to erase -- in Berlin, the last remnants of Communism, in Moscow a cold-war era that ended in national humiliation. But in Berlin, the government spent a decade wringing its hands over the place of the Palace in the country's collective memory. After years of heated public debate, the building is still standing. In Moscow, the government acts with unchallenged speed and brutality. There is little public outcry. The monuments of the 60's and 70's -- designed in a mix of Modern and classical styles -- are dismissed, fairly or not, as experiments in bad taste. But the importance of a city's architectural legacy goes beyond aesthetics. Preserving it is a way of preserving collective memory.
Among the most famous urban development projects in Moscow is the Khrushchev-era Kalinin Prospekt, a late Modernist thoroughfare that carves through the city's southern sector. Designed by Mikhail Posokhin, who was then Moscow's chief architect, the avenue's rows of concrete-and-glass towers, which rise out of a seemingly endless base of commercial shops and restaurants, were built during the height of the cold war. Their sleek, uniform facades were meant to evoke the era's progressive values as well as the potency of Russia's military-industrial complex.
Today, Kalinin Prospekt is regarded by many as an urban planning failure. Only a few years ago, Posokhin's own son, Mikhail, now a powerful architect in his own right, unveiled a proposal to renovate the entire strip. The plan, which was never approved, would have enveloped the towers in a postmodern pastiche of historical decor, winding pedestrian streets and landscaped terraces -- the kind of generic mall that was promoted by American urban planners in the 80's.
Posokhin would not be the first architect to try to exorcise ghosts of the past by obliterating them. But this generation may not have the distance to judge the historical worth of such projects. A growing number of young architects admire Kalinin Prospekt for the confidence it exudes. At night, the shimmering towers have a raw power that is only likely to grow more haunting over time.
The same could be said of the Khrushchev-era housing blocks that sprang up on the outskirts of the city in the early 60's. Built during the height of Khrushchev's reforms, the developments were conceived as a Soviet alternative to the prosperity of postwar suburban America. Eventually they became a standardized model for social housing throughout the East bloc, where thousands of them were built.
Revzin, the architecture critic, took me to the housing complex where he and his younger brother grew up. The sensitivity of the design surprised me. Inspired by the free-floating compositions of early avant-garde artists like El Lissitsky, the narrow five-story buildings were arranged to loosely frame a series of gardens planted with birch trees. The concrete structures, decorated with narrow wooden balconies, rest on the landscape with an unexpected lightness, as if they were floating within a forest in a Russian fairy tale.
Over tea, Revzin's mother, who raised two children in a tiny two-bedroom apartment here, told me that these developments represented a new kind of freedom for her generation. They were the first apartments a young Soviet couple could afford to buy on a worker's yearly salary. Though small, they offered an alternative to the cramped communal living that was a stultifying feature of Soviet life. Today most of these developments, which once encircled much of the city, are being bulldozed to make room for sleek residential high-rises. Revzin says his mother expects she'll have to move out by the end of the year.
When I mentioned the fate of these developments to the city's head of urban planning, Sergei Tkachenko, he dismissed Revzin's misgivings as misplaced nostalgia. ''I understand when people feel sentimental about where they grew up,'' he said. ''But they are backward places. If I can afford a Mercedes and I drive a Lada, it is just hypocrisy. And now I can afford a Mercedes.''
Tkachencko may have a point. Certainly, not all of these developments would be worth preserving. The mechanical systems were poorly designed; the walls -- made of plaster board -- are so thin that they don't afford much privacy. Nor is it possible to freeze an entire era in time. Even Revzin seems, at times, to be resigned to the loss. ''I don't know if you can call this corruption,'' he said later. ''It is the reality of our privatization. It is eating everything.''
Yet the pace of destruction seems to reflect a society that has somehow lost its moorings -- and that may be too exhausted to care. In Moscow, this indifference could soon lead to the loss of one of the richest architectural experiments of the 20th century. What the city may be left with are the haunting monuments of Stalin -- too deeply embedded in its fabric and too lavish to ignore.
Nicolai Ouroussoff is the chief architecture critic for The New York Times.