25 – Palace of the Soviets – Wedding Cake Stalinism - a podcast by Luke Jones & George Gingell Discuss Architecture, History and Culture

from 2017-10-30T09:00

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First announced in 1931, the project for the Palace of the Soviets in Moscow evolved into a staggeringly vast and bizarre proposal which stalled during WWII when only the foundations had been completed. A 400m tall neoclassical fantasy topped with a vast statue of Lenin; the Palace would probably, if completed, have still been the tallest building in the world in the year 2000. Forming a counterpart of sorts to our discussion of the Chicago Tribune — the Palace is another worldwide competition of the interwar period in which the battle over architectural style and ideology played out in the process of selection and development, as the old 1920s avant grade felt the ground shift under them and the ideology of Stalinist architecture began to solidify.


A couple of helpful listener corrections (here)[https://www.instagram.com/p/BbUxAq2FLaj/] (and here)[https://www.instagram.com/p/BbUxB0vlmnJ/]


We discussed —
Joze Pleçnik
Edwin Lutyens (neither in the competition)


Russian Avant-gardists —
Ivan Leonidov
Konstantin Melnikov
Mosei Ginzburg


The League of Nations Competition entries of Le Corbusier & Hannes Meyer


Foreign modernists in Russia
Ernst May


And the entries of — 
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Erich Mendehlson
Hans Pölzig
Auguste Perret


The winners — 
Boris Iofan
Vladimir Shchuko
Hector Hamilton


Plus the later designs of —
Ilya Golosov’s
Vladimir Shchuko and Vladimir Gelfreikh
Alabian, Kochar and Mordvinov’s Simbirtsev


Alexander Brodsky’s Reminiscences


Anatole Kopp ‘Foreign architects in the Soviet Union during the first two five-year plans’
Sonia Hoisington ‘Even Higher: The Evolution of the Palace of the Soviets’


Music — 
‘A1’ from the album ‘ΝΕΑ ΕΛΛΗΝΙΚΑ ΚΟΚΚΑΛΑ’ by Kοκκαλα, from the Free Music Archive
‘Bolshevik Leaves Home’ (1918) by D. Vasilev-Buglay, Demyan Bedniy
Soviet National Anthem, Stalin version


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