The Muzeon sits on the former site of the All-Russia Agricultural and Industrial Craft Exhibition, which was constructed in 1923. In the middle, young architect Andrei Burov built a soccer stadium. Vladimir Lenin visited the exhibition during his last trip to Moscow, three months before his death. Lenin was driven in a car past pavilions designed by
Konstantin Melnikov,
Vladimir Shchuko, and
Vera Mukhina, before departing for the estate of Gorki, where he died. The
Krymsky Bridge, the first
cable-stayed bridge in the
Soviet Union, was built under Joseph Stalin in 1938. The granite Krymskaya and Pushkinskaya embankments were laid down shortly thereafter. Until the late 19th century, there had not been any embankments, just river banks reinforced with paving stones. During the
Great Patriotic War (also known as the Eastern Front of World War II)
military hardware and
anti-aircraft weapons were stationed near Krymsky Bridge. By the late 1940s, a vast, empty space had appeared that became the city's largest snow-dumping ground. Architects proposed different suggestions for this site such as the Academy of Sciences to the Palace of the Soviets, however Culture Minister
Yekaterina Furtseva insisted that
Central House of Artists be built on the site. Construction on this project broke ground in 1965 amidst wooden shanties. The square around CHA was built in the 1980s. In the late 1980s, at the height of
Perestroika, CHA began holding lavish exhibitions by artists such as
Francis Bacon,
Giorgio Morandi,
Jannis Kounellis,
Robert Rauschenberg, and
James Rosenquist. Sculptures by Western
modernists appeared in the adjacent park.
After dissolution of the USSR On August 22, 1991,
the statue of Felix Dzerzhinsky was dismantled and brought to the park.
The Communist Party was banned in November of 1991. Busts of Lenin, and statues of
Kalinin,
Sverdlov, and Stalin from across Moscow started to pile up on the grass–including a pink-granite statue of Stalin, his face smashed by hammer blows. Sculptures were brought in from shuttered sculpture factories, Soviet-era workshops where anonymous artisans manufactured figurines. In January 1992, Moscow Mayor
Yury Luzhkov signed a decree establishing the Muzeon Park of Arts. Gradually, some of the statues were hoisted to their feet and arranged throughout the park, while some still remain in their fallen form. It currently holds over 1,000 sculptures in its collection. It is split into themed sections (i.e. the Oriental Garden,
Pushkin Square, Portrait Row). Many of the monuments appeared before 1992. Post-communist tourism driven by Westerners has increased the number of visitors seeking the discarded Soviet monuments. In the 2000s, the park began hosting symposiums for sculptors working with limestone; the sculptures they donated are displayed on a special square reserved for white-stone sculptures. The symposiums featured a wide range of subjects and participants, including professionals such as Fakhraddin Rzayev, Vladimir Buinachev, and Grigory Krasnoshlykov, as well as amateurs. ==Muzeon today==