Kazimir Mital: Constructivist, Social Revolutionary, Stakhanovite ...

The article discusses the life and work of the Irkutsk architect K. V. Mital (1877–1938). His fate is both unique and typical at the same time: the son of Polish exiles who found themselves in Siberia was educated in St. Petersburg and, after returning to Irkutsk, made a brilliant career as an arch...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Vasily Lisitsin
Format: Article
Language:Russian
Published: Russian Academy of Architecture and Construction Sciences 2019-12-01
Series:Проект Байкал
Subjects:
Online Access:http://projectbaikal.com/index.php/pb/article/view/1550
Description
Summary:The article discusses the life and work of the Irkutsk architect K. V. Mital (1877–1938). His fate is both unique and typical at the same time: the son of Polish exiles who found themselves in Siberia was educated in St. Petersburg and, after returning to Irkutsk, made a brilliant career as an architect before and after the revolution, using the style trends that prevailed in different periods of the first third of the century: art Nouveau, eclecticism, constructivism. Despite the fact that in a certain period of time he had a direct relation to the socialist revolutionary party, in the 1930s he became a sought-after expert who performed important projects and administration and even an architect-stakhanovite. But still, in the end, he was arrested by the NKVD and died in a prison hospital. The article presents new, previously unpublished facts about K. V. Mital.
ISSN:2307-4485
2309-3072