Typical urban development under Stalin; Stalinist architecture is a stylistic term referring to architecture built from the 1930s to the 1950s under Stalin’s regime in the USSR and to comparable architecture built in Warsaw Pact countries after World War II. It is characterized by its orientation towards a classical tradition, its monumentality and its representational ornament. Towards the end of the 1950s the style was gradually abandoned because it was considered uneconomical. Source: Grove Art Online; http://www.oxfordartonline.com/ (accessed 5/13/2009
Khreschatyk is a page apart in the history of world architecture. While it has a number of distinct ...
AbstractAfter the Second World War, the communist regime supported by Moscow started building the Ne...
We have long regarded beating babies of avant-garde to be the most serious cultural crime, which thr...
Typical urban development under Stalin; Stalinist architecture is a stylistic term referring to arch...
The article is dedicated to the peculiarities of the architecture of “Stalinist Empire style” by the...
Published in June 2017The socialist reconstruction of Sofia evolved at the juncture of institution-b...
During the rule of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) the built environment was filled w...
Relying on all but forgotten texts of architectural criticism from late Soviet Central Asia, the art...
During the first half of the social history ХХ century of European countries and the Soviet Union as...
Architectural and urban projects in the countries of Eastern Europe after WWII were subordinated to ...
During the shift from the rule of Joseph Stalin to that of Nikita Khrushchev, people in the Soviet U...
This project looked at the various responses, both political and aesthetic, to the end of socialist ...
The aim of this thesis is to present transformations taking place in Kiev during the communist era a...
The development of Soviet neoclassicism in Western Siberia is considered from the perspective of a s...
Close view looking up; The Hilton Moscow Leningradskaya Hotel is one of Moscow's Seven Sisters, skys...
Khreschatyk is a page apart in the history of world architecture. While it has a number of distinct ...
AbstractAfter the Second World War, the communist regime supported by Moscow started building the Ne...
We have long regarded beating babies of avant-garde to be the most serious cultural crime, which thr...
Typical urban development under Stalin; Stalinist architecture is a stylistic term referring to arch...
The article is dedicated to the peculiarities of the architecture of “Stalinist Empire style” by the...
Published in June 2017The socialist reconstruction of Sofia evolved at the juncture of institution-b...
During the rule of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) the built environment was filled w...
Relying on all but forgotten texts of architectural criticism from late Soviet Central Asia, the art...
During the first half of the social history ХХ century of European countries and the Soviet Union as...
Architectural and urban projects in the countries of Eastern Europe after WWII were subordinated to ...
During the shift from the rule of Joseph Stalin to that of Nikita Khrushchev, people in the Soviet U...
This project looked at the various responses, both political and aesthetic, to the end of socialist ...
The aim of this thesis is to present transformations taking place in Kiev during the communist era a...
The development of Soviet neoclassicism in Western Siberia is considered from the perspective of a s...
Close view looking up; The Hilton Moscow Leningradskaya Hotel is one of Moscow's Seven Sisters, skys...
Khreschatyk is a page apart in the history of world architecture. While it has a number of distinct ...
AbstractAfter the Second World War, the communist regime supported by Moscow started building the Ne...
We have long regarded beating babies of avant-garde to be the most serious cultural crime, which thr...