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N.Y Times: The Keeper Of Moscow's Architectural Conscience

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  • N.Y Times: The Keeper Of Moscow's Architectural Conscience

    THE KEEPER OF MOSCOW'S ARCHITECTURAL CONSCIENCE

    The New York Times
    http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/28/arts/desig n/28appraisal.html

    As director of the Shchusev State Museum of Architecture in Moscow,
    David Sarkisyan was a flamboyant figure who held court in an office
    crammed with sculptures, artifacts and souvenirs.

    No one who visited the office of David Sarkisyan, the outspoken
    director of the Shchusev State Museum of Architecture in Moscow,
    soon forgot the experience. Wedged behind an ornate desk cluttered
    with Soviet-era souvenirs, architectural tchotchkes and ashtrays,
    he was constantly fulminating against the decrepit state of that
    city's landmarks, enthusing about a drawing he had discovered buried
    somewhere in the museum's archives, making introductions among the
    architects, historians and socialites who constantly wandered in
    and out, or pleading over the phone with the few journalists and
    government officials he felt he could trust.

    All the while he would be driving his points home with a lighted
    cigarette; during one such visit several years ago his hands became so
    animated as he described the atrocious condition of a 1920s apartment
    block that his cigarette flew across the room.

    To those of us conditioned by an international museum culture
    dominated by polished directors and their powerful boards, he was
    an extraordinary if anachronistic example of what a single person
    at the helm of a crumbling institution with few financial resources
    could accomplish - even in a world that seemed bent on silencing him.

    Mr. Sarkisyan, who died on Jan. 7 at a Munich hospital at the age of
    62, was the center of Moscow's architectural world. Moreover, in an era
    in which that capital's historic buildings are being demolished with
    alarming speed and brutality, he was one of very few people willing
    to stand up to the city's ruthless alliance of corrupt politicians
    and powerful developers.

    "He was not interested in having a comfortable life; he didn't follow
    any of the normal rules," Peter Noever, director of the Museum of
    Applied Arts in Vienna, said in a recent telephone interview. "He
    stood for resistance."

    Mr. Sarkisyan, who had no formal education in architecture, was
    an improbable champion of architectural causes. Born in Yerevan,
    Armenia, in 1947, he worked as a pharmacologist and then in film,
    both as a producer and director. (He worked on Rustam Khamdamov's
    art-house movie "Anna Karamazoff," becoming friends with the film's
    star, Jeanne Moreau.)

    When he took over the museum in early 2000, at the request of the
    Russian minister of construction, a close friend, it seemed like
    a lost cause. Like many cultural institutions in the chaos of the
    post-Soviet era, the museum had lost most of its state financing. Many
    of its 19th-century galleries were badly dilapidated; in places, water
    dripped from the ceiling into plastic buckets. To make ends meet,
    the former director had rented some of its offices out to law firms.

    Yet the museum was also a trove of architectural treasures, including
    renderings and models from czarist times and the archives of many of
    the titans of Soviet architecture, from Konstantin Melnikov to Alexei
    Shchusev, after whom the institution was named.

    Mr. Sarkisyan fell in love with it. He pushed out the law firms
    and installed himself in a dark second-floor office. A flamboyant,
    theatrical figure who liked his vodka, he held court there day and
    night; his staff regularly found him in the mornings, on a small
    daybed.

    He was the first to show the work of major contemporary architects like
    Coop Himmelblau and Rem Koolhaas in Moscow. And he mounted a number
    of impressive shows, including one this past fall on a collaboration
    between the artist Vera Muchina and the architect B. M.

    Jofan that produced the Soviet Pavilion at the 1937 Paris World's
    Fair, a benchmark of Socialist Realism. At the time of his death he
    was working on a show about Melnikov in collaboration with the Museum
    of Applied Arts.

    But most of all, he used his international connections to pressure
    government officials - in particular the powerful mayor of Moscow,
    Yuri Luzhkov - in a desperate effort to save the city he loved from
    the wrecking ball.

    In 2004 he wrote an open letter to both Mayor Luzhkov and
    then-president Vladimir V. Putin deploring the widespread demolition
    of historic buildings in Moscow. The letter caused an outcry in
    the worldwide architecture community, and eventually led hundreds
    of architects, curators and museum directors to petition the Russian
    government for the enforcement of preservation laws. (If nothing else,
    the mayor was forced into making a public reply.)

    Among the wide range of buildings Mr. Sarkisyan fought to save was
    the 1929 Melnikov House, which the architect designed for himself and
    which became one of the great examples of early Soviet architecture;
    the Moskva Hotel, a Stalin-era landmark designed by Shchusev; and
    the Voyentorg department store, an Art Deco building completed in 1913.

    His success was mixed. Melnikov's two granddaughters, one of whom
    is allied with a developer, are currently fighting each other for
    control of his house in the courts; though both say they want it to
    become a museum, its fate remains unclear. The Moskva Hotel and the
    Voyentorg store have been demolished, and, in a cynical mockery of
    historic preservation that has become the norm in today's Moscow,
    are being rebuilt as gaudy kitsch replicas. (The new Moskva, a Four
    Seasons Hotel, will open this year.)

    Even when he failed, however, Mr. Sarkisyan sought to make the public
    conscious of what was being lost, not only in his activism but in the
    way he ran the museum. The courtyard of his museum was decorated with
    sculptural reliefs from the facade of the Cathedral of Christ the
    Savior, which had been ordered demolished by Stalin in 1931. And Mr.

    Sarkisyan often showed visitors the tarnished light fixtures and
    doorknobs that he had salvaged from the wreckage of the Moskva Hotel.

    In the months before Mr. Sarkisyan's death, developers in Moscow
    seemed to be embarking on yet another cycle of destruction. One
    began gutting the interior of the Detsky Mir department store, a 1957
    structure designed by Alexei Dushkin in a pared-down classical style,
    which stands across a square from the old secret-police headquarters.

    At around the same time the national government signed off on a plan
    by the mayor's wife, a billionaire developer, to demolish the vast
    exhibition hall that houses the Tretyakov gallery's 20th-century
    collections - a landmark of Brezhnev-era Modernism - and replace it
    with a luxury housing complex designed by Norman Foster.

    It's impossible to know if Mr. Sarkisyan could have done much to
    stop these grotesque architectural crimes. But he, more than anyone,
    made the world aware of what was at stake.

    On January 15 hundreds attended a wake held at the museum, where his
    body was displayed in an open coffin, as is Russian custom.

    "Every kind of person was there," Mr. Noever told me. "Cleaning women,
    artists, models with long legs, men in expensive suits who looked like
    oligarchs - maybe a thousand people. And he was laid out like Lenin."
    From: Baghdasarian
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