Alexei Komech (8 August 1936 – 28 February 2007)[1] was a Russian preservationist, architectural historian and art critic who helped protect the cultural heritage of Moscow and Saint Petersburg for over 50 years. He was the Director of the Moscow Art History Institute and a member of the Moscow's City Government's Architectural Consultative Council.[2]
Komech commanded immense respect in the city of Moscow and often battled with the mayor, Yury Luzhkov, and local developers to save the city's architectural heritage from the "substitution of historic sites with modern reproductions and theatrical imitations."[3] He also served on the board of the Open Society Institute–Russia[4]
'The city is interested in receiving so much [from construction] that it pushes the architecture council to allow anything,' he said. 'It has allow[ed developers] to destroy, to start anew, to build underground garages at the price of the historical part of the city. ... It's all at the expense of the city's history'[5]
Publications
edit- Komech, Alexei (1991) The Golden Ring: Cities of Old Russia. ISBN 1-55859-216-4
- Gippenreiter, Vadim and Komech, Alexei (1991) Old Russian Cities. ISBN 1-85669-009-1
References
edit- ^ "Died Director of the State Institute of arts Alexei Komech" Russian News
- ^ "Muscovites debate benefits of building boom" Archived 2017-03-02 at the Wayback Machine - Australian Broadcasting Corporation, 9 April 2006
- ^ "The Rise and Fall of Monuments" by Charles Merewether
- ^ Open Society Institute–Russia Archived 2007-02-16 at the Library of Congress Web Archives President and chair: Ekaterina Genieva; Board: Ekaterina Genieva (Chair), Andrei Arofikian, Larisa Baleva,Lev Ivanov, Alexei Komech, Arseniy Roginsky, Boris Saltykov
- ^ "Heritage Champion Battles City Hall" Moscow Times, February 3, 2004
External links
edit- "Tearing Down Moscow", Moscow Times - Crisis facing Moscow's historical buildings
- "New Moscow's Architecture: Harmony Or Cacophony?" Pravda (in English) 21 October 2003