This section is based on Khan-Magomedov's
Soviet avant-garde architecture, vol.1, "Avant-garde to postconstructivism and beyond" and experience led them to success in any style –
Art Nouveau, Neoclassicism and Constructivism. • A younger, diverse avant-garde movement (itself divided into
rationalists and
constructivists). With the exception of the
Vesnin brothers, few constructivists had acquired professional experience before
World War I; the war,
Revolution of 1917 and
Civil war halted any new construction for a decade (1914–1926). In 1927–1929, former theorists
Nikolai Ladovsky,
Moisei Ginzburg,
Ilya Golosov stepped aside from public discussions and switched to practical building and urban planning. By 1933, they had not more than seven years of practice and were just entering their own age of maturity. • Finally, the vocal students of the 'Proletarian School', members of
VOPRA: the "class of 1929" (
Arkady Mordvinov,
Karo Alabyan). Trained by Constructivist leaders in a style they dubbed "sterile avant-garde," they were completely unaware of the classical legacy and had no practical experience. They compensated for this with left-wing political assaults and accusations, in particular a campaign against
Ivan Leonidov.
Birth of a style According to Khan-Magomedov, two forerunners of the style were
Ivan Fomin and
Ilya Golosov. They converged on the same form from opposite directions –
neoclassicism and
constructivism. Fomin's concept, easily formulated, erected in steel and granite in Moscow (Dynamo Building), was well understood even by the inexperienced youth. "The youth instinctively followed those who managed to declare their stance clearly. The youth believed that this period is a self-sufficient cultural stage, not a transition to something else". Image:Wiki_school_518_2.jpg|
School 518 by
Ivan Zvezdin, 1933–35 Image:Moscow_SE_housing_guryevgurevich_saltsman_1935.jpg|Schosse Entuziastov housing by Guryev-Gurevich and Zaltsmann, 1935–36 Image:Moscow_SE_housing_guryevgurevich_saltsman_1936.jpg|Schosse Entuziastov housing by Guryev-Gurevich and Zaltsmann, 1935–36 ;Leningrad ;Sverdlovsk and Kuibyshev Image:Kuibyshev_housing_matveyev_bosin_1936.jpg|Kuibyshev housing, by Matveyev and Bosim, 1936 Image:Sverdlovsk_hospital_yugov_1936_1939.jpg|Sverdlovk, hospital, by Yugov, 1936–39 Image:Sverdlovsk_housing_1932.jpg|Sverdlovsk, 1932 tower Image:Sverdlovsk_housing_oransky_1936.jpg|Sverdlovsk, housing by Oransky, 1936
Demise By 1936, the left-wing "class of 1929" and younger (Mordvinov, Alabyan) had gained some practical experience. These architects completely lacked the classical training of older Constructivists; lack of skill prevented them from inventing their own incarnation of classical legacy; all they could do was copying. As a result, they buried their avantgarde teachers and proceeded straight to pure neoclassicism. They could not stop at postconstructivism because they – unlike Golosov or Fomin – could not innovate. Meanwhile, Fomin died in 1936, and Golosov was aging physically, clearing the road for the young. Another group of young architects, seeking academic training, joined the workshops of Zholtovsky and other old neoclassicists. They, too, skipped over postconstructivism – straight to the Stalinist canon. Their old mentors were still active and enjoyed the support of the State. There was no need for inventing new shapes or styling anymore. Postconstructivist projects dragged on for a few more years, but
World War II finally sealed the fate of this style. ==Criticism of Khan-Magomedov's viewpoint==