Lev Vladimirovich Rudnev
Lev Wladimirowitsch Rudnew ( Russian Лев Владимирович Руднев ; * March 1 July / March 13, 1885 greg. In Veliky Novgorod ; † November 19, 1956 in Moscow ) was a Russian architect and a representative of socialist classicism .
Life
Rudnew was born in the city of Opochka (other sources say Veliky Novgorod ) into a family of school teachers. He attended a grammar school in Riga and graduated from the Petersburg Art Academy in Saint Petersburg (1906). At the academy he studied painting with Leonti Benois and architecture with Iwan Fomin . In 1915 Rudnew graduated as an art architect.
After the February Revolution , Rudnev won the competition for the Monument to the Victims of the Revolution on the Field of Mars in Petrograd (March 1917). The avant-garde monument there was built according to his project. 1922–1948 Rudnew was a professor at the Art Academy in Leningrad, then 1948–1952 professor at the Moscow Institute of Architecture . One of his students was Oleg L. Lyalin . Rudnew was also a member of the Soviet Academy of Architecture .
plant
He was the planner of many large projects, often described as pompously monumental, including:
- Military Academy "MW Frunze" Moscow (1939)
- Administration building on Schaposhnikov Street (1934–1938)
- Administration building on Frunse-Damm (1938–1955)
- Main building of Lomonosov University (1949–1953), probably his best-known building, Stalin Prize 1949
- Government building of the Azerbaijan SSR in Baku (completed in 1952)
- Palace of Culture (Warsaw) (1952–1955)
- High-rise of the Science Academy (Riga) (1952–1955)
Web links
- Lomonosov University in Moscow (Russia)
- Biography and Works (Russian)
- Architect of the main building of Moscow University (Russian)
- Biography (russian)
- Works (russian)
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Rudnew, Lev Vladimirovich |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Руднев, Лев Владимирович (Russian spelling) |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Russian architect |
DATE OF BIRTH | March 13, 1885 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Veliky Novgorod |
DATE OF DEATH | November 19, 1956 |
Place of death | Moscow |