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The Soviet Union has left a vast heritage in interior design that
is largely unknown in the West. Other than architecture and graphic
or product design, interior design from the Soviet era has not yet
been thoroughly investigated. For the first time ever, this book
offers a comprehensive survey of the country's interior design
culture between revolutionary avant-garde and late Soviet
modernism. Drawing on archives that were inaccessible until
recently and featuring a wealth of previously unpublished material,
it documents the achievements of seven decades in the former
socialist empire. Soviet design is often discredited as massive,
non-ergonomic and monotonous. Yet a remarkable variety of original
styles have emerged behind the iron curtain. The 1920s were marked
by bold exploration and experiments at Vkhutemas and by
constructivism, rationalism, and suprematism. Early in Stalin's
reign constructivism was heavily criticised and post-constructivism
and Soviet neo-classicism appeared alongside what became known as
'agitational furniture', inspired by the regime's propaganda. The
1930s brought Soviet Art Deco and eventually Stalinist Empire,
which has produced some of the Soviet Union's most iconic
buildings. In the late 1950s, after Stalin's death, the last Soviet
'big style' originated modernist and functionalist furniture,
mass-produced to fit the small apartments in the Khrushchyovka
multi-unit housing developments that were built in cities on a
large scale. The 1960s mark the Golden Age of Soviet interior
design, showing again influences by the early Soviet Avant-Garde
and the Bauhaus, while most of the visionary work of a new
generation of designers in the 1970s and 1980s remained unrealised.
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