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William Craft Brumfield

    William Craft Brumfield stands as the foremost Western authority on Russian architecture, his lifelong passion vividly captured through his extensive photographic work. Brumfield has dedicated himself to documenting Russia's architectural landscape since 1970, his lens capturing both the grandeur and the ephemerality of its structures. His body of work offers profound insights into the rich history and diverse styles of Russian architecture, contributing significantly to its preservation and understanding. Through his captivating photographs and scholarly publications, Brumfield makes the beauty and cultural significance of Russian buildings accessible to a global audience.

    A History of Russian Architecture
    Journeys through the Russian Empire
    • Journeys through the Russian Empire

      • 528 pages
      • 19 hours of reading

      "JOURNEYS THROUGH THE RUSSIAN EMPIRE will contain about four hundred photographs, accompanied by historical contextualization. The project compares William Brumfield's photographs of churches and locations in Russia with the same structures and places photographed by Sergei Prokudin-Gorsky, an early-20th-century Russian inventor of a color photography process, as much as a century earlier. Through this comparison, Brumfield assesses the state of preservation of Russia's architectural heritage and examines the appeal and pitfalls of seeing Prokudin-Gorsky's striking images as a recovery of Russia's lost past. Brumfield examines fervent Russian engagement with the Prokudin-Gorsky collection, which was recently made broadly available through digitization. The author questions the nostalgic assumptions of many analysts, who see the images as a portrayal of an idyllic Russia intact before the Soviet era and neglect the imperial violence present before the revolution. Prokudin-Gorsky himself was idealistic about the imperial potential. He intended his new color photography to convey the cultural and ethnic diversity of the vast Russian Empire, using this medium to impart a visual message from the provinces to the urban centers about the richness of Russia's history, culture, and borderlands. He escaped Russia in 1918 with many of the heavy glass negatives he used, and the Library of Congress ultimately bought the collection. Because of his own field experience photographing Russian architectural monuments, Brumfield was approached to catalog, restore, and exhibit Prokudin-Gorsky's photographs. While working on the project, he realized how much the two photographer's journeys across Russia had, unintentionally, intersected. His own photographic project accelerated with the relaxation of travel restrictions within the Soviet Union during the late 1980s; he documents the remnants of Russia's architectural heritage, and its expression of history, art, and spiritual culture, that Prokudin-Gorsky recorded earlier. This project will be of particular interest to scholars and students of Russian history, art, and architecture, as well as general readers interested in photography and historic preservation"-- Provided by publisher

      Journeys through the Russian Empire
    • A History of Russian Architecture

      • 752 pages
      • 27 hours of reading
      4.2(12)Add rating

      The author, a professor of Russian studies at Tulane University, brings extensive expertise in Russian architecture and modernism. His notable works include "Lost Russia" and "The Origins of Modernism in Russian Architecture." Additionally, he is a member of the Russian Academy of Architecture and Construction Sciences, highlighting his significant contributions to the field. Readers can explore the William C. Brumfield Russian Architecture Collection online for further insights into this rich architectural heritage.

      A History of Russian Architecture