schroeder gerrit rietveld‘s house interior

3/ Schroeder Gerrit Rietveld’s House, 1924

Kim Zwarts © 2015 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / Pictoright Amsterdam

What it certainly does not look like is the “normal” modernist house: too much color, too many details unrelated to function.

Nonetheless, it is the predecessor of the modernist house. The Schroeder house is one of the daring early experiments on which the architecture of modernism was built.

3/ Schroeder Gerrit Rietveld’s House — Gallery

Kim Zwarts © 2015 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / Pictoright Amsterdam

Gerrit Rietveld: The Architect and Designer © Phaidon Press

4/ KONSTANTIN MELNIKOV’S HOUSE

1927–1929

© Igor Palmin

konstantin melnikov‘s house

4/ Konstantin Melnikov’s House, 1927–1929

© Wikipedia

The home is made up of two cylinders with honeycombed walls and a single bedroom for the entire family. The house is an architectural masterpiece, is celebrated worldwide and is one of the top attractions for foreign tourists to Moscow.

konstantin melnikov‘s portrait

All 20th-century architects built homes for themselves, all except Soviet architects, in whose country stand-alone residences ran against the powerful Socialist tide. How Melnikov managed to evade these constraints is a mystery and our good fortune that providence happened to smile on this wildest of all the dreamers of the Soviet avant-garde.

konstantin melnikov‘s living room

4/ Konstantin Melnikov’s House, 1927–1929

Living room © All photos by Igor Palmin

But, for Russians, it is important not so much as an architectural wonder but as a cultural anomaly: a single-family home built during the era of the accursed “apartment question” with the inscription, “Konstantin Melnikov architect”, proudly displayed over the entrance and with an enormous, bright, cathedral-like studio on the third floor, all of it bespeaking Melnikov’s pride in a profession little recognized in the USSR, whose members were treated as anonymous functionaries of design institutes and slaves of the building industry.

4/ Konstantin Melnikov’s House, 1927–1929

Living room

Studio

konstantin melnikov‘s house hallway
konstantin melnikov‘s living room
konstantin melnikov‘s studio

Hallway © All photos by Igor Palmin

5/ WALTER GROPIUS’s HOUSE

1938

© Library of Congress

walter gropius‘s house