Exhibition archive
27 april > 17 juni 2001Konstantin Melnikov and the Architecture in Moscow

"Konstantin
S. Melnikov, in his numerous buildings and projects, demonstrated
a rare freedom and genius that stands as an alternative to the sterile
and main stream of International Style modernism.
But he was
much more than this. In his visionary views on the relation of architecture
and life, in his metaphysical approach to design and building, he
called architecture back to ideals that thrived in the ages of the
baroque and neo-classicism but which died out in our own century.
One can only hope that this deeper vision, which animated the life
and work of that pale and ascetic old man whom I met back in 1967,
will find a more sympathetic reception in the new millennium.
What twentieth
century architect left us a more concentrated and complex legacy
than Konstantin Melnikov? His genius took wing at the end of the
Russian civil war and was forced to earth again stretching forward
to our day.
Yet in spite
of many published biographies, monographs and articles devoted to
him, Melnikov and his architecture remain terra incognita. This
is nearly everything published to date has sought to fit him nearly
into the straight jacket of contending schools and factions. True,
it is worth knowing how he related to the Constructivists, the Formalists,
to Le Corbusier or the International Style. But that brings us only
to the starting line, who will carry the search further, and deeper?
Happily, this
is precisely what Mario Fosso, Maurizio Merigi and their pan-European
team of collaborators have accomplished. Their exciting undertaking
begins and ends with the buildings as Melnikov conceived and, when
he was fortunate, built them. With an eagle's eye they have ferreted
out crucial and neglected aspects of each project, translating them
lovingly into models that, together, form one of the most stunning
and illuminating exhibitions of architecture of our era."
Frederick Starr (DOMUS, n. 826, May 2000)
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