Maria Vladimirovna Naschtschokina

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Marija Wladimirowna Naschtschokina ( Russian Мари́я Влади́мировна Нащо́кина ; born November 30, 1953 ) is a Russian architect and art historian .

Life

Marija Naschtschokina studied at the Moscow Architecture University in the Faculty of Urban Development with BK Jeremin and IG Leschawa. She then worked in the Allunions Kombi for scientific restoration and restored the parks of the Villa Grebnewo near Frjasino and the Villa Mamonow on the Sparrow Hills in Moscow. She developed the conception and planning for the Museum of Urban Wood Architecture in the Tula Kremlin , but this was not carried out. She then returned to the Moscow School of Architecture to do a doctoral thesis with Professor TF Sawarenska. With her work The ancient legacy of Russian architecture in the middle of the 19th century , she received her doctorate in art history in 1983 (corresponding to a habilitation ). She was then appointed to the Moscow Research Institute for Theory and History of Architecture and Urban Design , which has been part of the Russian Academy of Architecture and Urban Design Sciences since 1993 . There she heads the Department of Modern Architecture .

Naschtschokina is First Deputy President of the Society for the Exploration of the Russian Villa , she is the author and scientific editor of all issues of the journal The Russian Villa (since No. 6), and she participates in the preparation and implementation of scientific conferences and wider meetings. For more than ten years she was also director general of the Shiraf publishing house , one of Russia's leading publishing houses for cultural studies.

Naschtschokina is an important expert in the history of architecture during the transition from the 19th to the 20th century with the blossoming of Art Nouveau . In 2004, she and others wrote an open letter to the President and Government of the Russian Federation to protect the derelict historic buildings in Moscow. It is a member of the Union of Architects of Russia and the Association of Art Scientists, as well as a corresponding member of the Russian Academy of Architecture and Urban Planning .

Awards and honors

  • Makarij Prize 1st stage (named after the Moscow metropolitan Makarij Bulgakow (1816–1882))
  • Gutnow Prize for Urban Development (named after the architect Alexei Elbrusowitsch Gutnow (1937–1986))
  • A. Blok Prize from the Russian magazine Our Heritage
  • 5 medals and several diplomas from the Russian Academy of Architecture and Urban Planning
  • Gold diplomas from the annual International Architecture Festival
  • Medal of the National Foundation Renaissance of the Russian Villa for years of research and popularization of monuments of Russian culture, architecture and garden art (2012)
  • Gold Medal of Honor of the 22nd International Festival of Architecture 2014 for the book series about the architect Lev Nikolajewitsch Kekuschew (1862–1919).
  • Honored Architect of the Russian Federation (2014)

Works (selection, Russian)

Literature and Sources

  • GA Melnitschuk, NW Stepanova: An Explorer of Russia's Cultural Past (via MW Naschtschokina) . Journal Bibliography No. 5 (2014), pp. 139–153.
  • Gardens and Times: Marija Naschtschokina (Russian, accessed November 10, 2015)

Individual evidence

  1. Open letter to the Moscow Patriarch Kirill (Russian, accessed November 10, 2015)
  2. Rustam Rachmatullin wanted "Schiraf" and striped (Russian, accessed November 9, 2015)
  3. Boris Jegorow: Alexander Blok Prize for the anthology "The Russian Villa" . Our Heritage (Russian, accessed November 10, 2015)