The faces of the capital's houses: How mascarons appeared in Moscow and where you can see them
The faces of the capital's houses: How mascarons appeared in Moscow and where you can see them

Video: The faces of the capital's houses: How mascarons appeared in Moscow and where you can see them

Video: The faces of the capital's houses: How mascarons appeared in Moscow and where you can see them
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When people in a hurry walk the streets of the center of Moscow, few people notice the small details on the old houses. Moreover, even large and noticeable, seemingly, architectural elements elude our attention. And meanwhile, from dozens of Moscow houses amazing masks are watching us, each of which has its own features and its own expression of a stone face …

Goddess at the house at st. Chaplygin, 1a. Architect G. Gelrich, 1911
Goddess at the house at st. Chaplygin, 1a. Architect G. Gelrich, 1911

Mascarons - convex molded figures in the form of human (most often, female), as well as animal or mythical faces and masks - in pre-revolutionary times were often placed on houses as architectural decorations. They can still be seen on some buildings at the top of the cladding of windows, doors, under balconies and many other places.

Building on Prospekt Mira, 19. Architect N. Matveev
Building on Prospekt Mira, 19. Architect N. Matveev
Staroposadsky lane, 8 (1878), architect K. Terskoy
Staroposadsky lane, 8 (1878), architect K. Terskoy
Kosmodomianovskaya street, 4/22
Kosmodomianovskaya street, 4/22

The first mascarons began to appear in Russia in the times of Peter the Great. For example, molded heads of angels could be found at the end of the 17th century on the walls of several Moscow churches, then images of lion faces (sometimes with human features) and, finally, delicate female heads came into fashion.

A girl from the surviving part of the fence of the Moscow Imperial Orphanage (second half of the 18th century)
A girl from the surviving part of the fence of the Moscow Imperial Orphanage (second half of the 18th century)

Such masks were especially often sculpted on Moscow houses precisely in the 17th and 18th centuries, but at the turn of the last and the century before last, they also met. Mascarons in Moscow have experienced different styles: baroque, classicism, empire. Even when at the beginning of the 20th century Art Nouveau confidently entered fashion, mascarons again found a place - for example, they could be seen on mansions built by the talented architect Fyodor Shekhtel.

Building in Staropanisky Pereulok, 5. Architect F. Shekhtel (1899 -1990)
Building in Staropanisky Pereulok, 5. Architect F. Shekhtel (1899 -1990)
Myasnitskaya Street, house 18. Profitable house of the merchant M. I. Mishin, 1903 Architect I. Baryutin
Myasnitskaya Street, house 18. Profitable house of the merchant M. I. Mishin, 1903 Architect I. Baryutin
Maly Karetny lane, house 4. Own house of architect V. Khobotov
Maly Karetny lane, house 4. Own house of architect V. Khobotov

The architectural fashion in Moscow changed, but the rich townspeople did not stop decorating their buildings with masked faces, and only in the Soviet years the fascination with mascarons among the customers and the architects themselves for obvious reasons (the fight against architectural excesses) began to decline.

Before the revolution, the owners of future buildings ordered such "masks" to artists and architects out of a desire to show their importance, social significance, material wealth, surprise the public, and sometimes this even went to the detriment of the grace and beauty of buildings.

Spiridonovka street, house 21 (1898). Architect A. Erichson
Spiridonovka street, house 21 (1898). Architect A. Erichson

However, among such pre-revolutionary architectural works there were also very interesting ones, made with a delicate taste. Well, in our time, perhaps, any such mascaron is a unique "exhibit".

Ryumin lane. Architects Galetsky and Voeikov (1904)
Ryumin lane. Architects Galetsky and Voeikov (1904)

You look at such a mask, try to unravel its mood, which the author wanted to convey, and it begins to seem that the house has a soul. Or maybe that's the way it is?

Bolshoi Cherkassky Lane, 9 (1901), architect A. Meisner
Bolshoi Cherkassky Lane, 9 (1901), architect A. Meisner
Ostozhenka Street, 24
Ostozhenka Street, 24

In Moscow, mascarons can most often be found in the city center. Most of these works are pre-revolutionary, and this gives the stone faces and the buildings themselves a special mystery.

Sergiy Radonezhsky Street, 7
Sergiy Radonezhsky Street, 7

Continuing the theme of mysterious houses, we recommend reading: History and legends of a house that looks like an Egyptology textbook

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