Grigorije Samojlov
Grigorije Ivanovich Samojlov (Russian: Григорий Иванович Самойлов; Taganrog, 8 September 1904 — Belgrade, 15 October 1989) was a Russian-born Belgrade architect and painter. He was one of the many academically-trained Russian emigrées who after settling in Serbia contributed the architectural landscape of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes.[1]He built in the spirit of academism, Serbo-Byzantine style, modernism and art deco. He distinguished himself not only with his high skills in designing various types of buildings, from monumental public buildings to family houses but also as the author of some of the most beautiful interiors of Belgrade palaces of this period.[2]Also, he painted the likenesses of King Alexander I of Yugoslavia, and scientist Milutin Milanković among the most notables, as well as teaching the art of design and painting.
He is the author of numerous works such as the chapel of Jovan Savić at Novo Groblje (the New Cemetery), the iconostasis and interior of the former Church of the Holy Trinity (now the Cathedral of Christ the Savior in Banja Luka),[3] the Church of the Holy Archangel Gabriel at Topčider Cemetery (1939),[4]the factory and villas of the Teokarović family, as well as the Church of the Nativity of St. John in Vučje,[5]Palace of the Pension Fund of Officials and Employees of the National Bank of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia (1938[6])in Terazije, with cinema "Belgrade", since 1975 converted into Theater on Terazije, the building of the Faculty of Mechanical Engineering[7]and the Faculty of Technology.[8]
Biography
He was born on 8 September 1904, in Tangarog, a small town on the coast of the Sea of Azov, in a wealthy Russian, Cossack family. He studied painting high school with the famous painter Serafima Blonskaya (Russian: Серафима Блонская) along with high school. At the end of the Civil War in Russia in 1921, when he was 17, he emigrated with his father to the Kingdom of the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes. Upon his arrival, his father died, and he then continued his education at the Don Military School in Bileća,[9]where he graduated, after which he enrolled in studies at the Architectural Department of the Technical Faculty at the University of Belgrade. He graduated in 1930. [10]For his diploma work, he designed the "Yugoslav Pantheon", conceived as a national monument, in a dominant place in the city, whose silhouette could be seen from a distance. The work was an example of the role of the neo-Byzantine style in forming the identity of the Yugoslav nation, by transposing the Serbian national style to all South Slavs, replacing the cross on the high central dome with a sculpture of victory, holding laurel wreaths in its hands. Although the project according to the program was not actually conceived as a Christian temple, a chandelier and a masonry iconostasis were projected inside. The work was included in the annual exhibition, which featured about forty students of architecture and was considered one of the best.[11]
Among the first public projects in which he applied elements of neo-Byzantine architecture is the competition project for the building of the Railway Station in Skopje, in 1931.[11]
A career in the interwar period
In the beginning, he worked as an associate of the architect Milutin Borisavljević, and later he became an assistant to Professor Aleksandar Deroko in the subject Byzantine Architecture.[12] At the same time, he worked in the office of Aleksandar Đorđević, then a recognized architect and representative of French academism. Djordjević hired Samojlov as an associate in the development of several large projects, such as the Belgrade Stock Exchange and the Beli Dvor. In addition, they became so close that Djordjević was the best man at the wedding of Samojlov and Danica Ljujić.[13]
He passed the state exam in 1933 when he obtained a permit for independent work.[14] The first independent achievement of the same year was a building on the corner of Skenderbegova and Dositejeva streets in the spirit of modernism, and one of the best achievements was a villa in Pushkinova Street (then Gladstone Street) in Senjak (once owned by Ljubica Radenković, and now one of the residences of the United States Embassy[15]) in a combination of medieval Serbian-Byzantine and Romanesque elements, for which he received the award of the city of Belgrade, as the best architectural solution.[16]
In the middle of 1936, when a competition was announced for the conceptual design of the iconostasis for the Banja Luka church of the Holy Trinity, as an assistant at the Architectural Department of the Technical Faculty of Belgrade University, "he considered it his duty to apply for the competition." In September of the same year, he was awarded the first prize, and in addition to the iconostasis, he gave a solution for chandeliers and carpentry. The works were completed in 1939 when the Cathedral was consecrated.[17]
Vasilija Vana Teokarević (widow of Serbian industrialist Dimitrije Mita Teokarević) commissioned Samojlov to build a kilometre from Vučje, along the canyon of the river Vučjanka, on the place where the medieval church used to be, the endowment of Nikola Skobaljić, which was destroyed by the Turks and around whose ruins the people gathered for centuries. Samojlov designed the Crkva Rođenja Jovana Krstitelja (the Church of the Nativity of St. John the Baptist). Now the 1938 church is considered by many to be one of the most significant and original achievements of recent Serbian church architecture. [18]The consecration of the church was attended by 20,000 people, and among those present were: the Minister of Justice and the envoy of the Vardar Banovina. In Leskovac, he designed the house of the industrialist Vojvodić, one of his most important works outside Belgrade.
In Leskovac, he also designed a residential building with a pharmacy on the ground floor for Miko Maznić.
He designed the Church of the Holy Archangel Gabriel in Humska Street, the endowment of the married couple Radmila and Milan S. Vukičević, the then MP, in memory of the victims of the Balkan Wars and the First World War, on land donated by the municipality in 1937-1939. For this modern temple, he used knowledge from medieval Serbia and Russia, with a great deal of individuality.
The capital work from this period, which is quite different from all his previous works, is the palace of the former pension fund of the National Bank on the corner of Nikola Pasic Square and Terazije, better known as the Palace of Cinema "Belgrade", designed in 1938 and completed in 1941. The building is a synthesis of new and traditional forms, and its monumentality is emphasized in the scale of the building and the treatment of the facade. It was built as a monumental corner residential and commercial building and combines two styles: academicism and modernism. The most attractive part of the building is the cinema, the space of which was rented by Ilija Djordjevic from the National Bank. The author received the highest praise for the cinema. Although it did not work for a long time, at that time there was an interesting electronic board above the cash register, on which the sold places were marked. At the end of his life, as his last work, he made a project to renovate the cinema into the Terazije Theater, which was already located there. This cultural monument has a significant architectural and cultural-historical value, although the new reconstruction changed Samojlovlje's solution and details beyond recognition, which destroyed one of the important public spaces of interwar Belgrade. [19]
One of his unfinished projects from 1940 is the forerunner of today's Belgrade woman, the Teokarović Palace, a twelve-storey skyscraper, the construction of which was prevented by the Lufftwaffe 6 April 1941 bombing of Belgrade.[20]At the beginning of 1940, an endowment of Luka Ćelović was completed, a five-story building on the corner of the then Krunska and Ferdinandova, today's address of Kneza Miloš 2.
One of his works is the Villa of the actress Marica Popović in Belgrade.
Second World War
In World War II, the Germans captured Grigorije Samojlov near Srebrenica, as an officer of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. He spent four years in captivity, first in the Bad Sulza concentration camp, and then, after breaking his leg and unable to work, was transferred to the Stalag IX-C concentration camp in Buchenwald. [13] For the needs of the Orthodox chapel in the camp, in 1943, one of the barracks was converted into a chapel for which he did the painting and woodcarving work. Oak sleepers from the old railway track were used for the wooden construction.[21] He was assisted by inmates who renounced packages and tracks in exchange for tools made from steel scrap and horseshoes.[22]On the iconostasis, he painted Saint Sava and Christ, whose hands were tied with ropes, but they were also separated, which represents the aspiration towards liberation. After the war, in 1945, the iconostasis was transferred and placed in the chapel of the Teacher's School "Queen Natalija", later it was transferred to the Patriarchate, and in 1953 it was transferred to the Church of the Nativity of St. John the Baptist, at the Central Cemetery. Although the iconostasis has no greater artistic value, due to its history it is under the protection of the state and UNESCO.[23]
Post-war period
He returned from captivity to Belgrade, where after the war he became a professor and taught the basics of graphics and painting.[14]
After the liberation of Belgrade, after the Soviet army occupied the premises of the former Russian House of Emperor Nicholas II and turned it into the House of Soviet Culture, it was decided to place a massive coat of arms of the USSR behind the portal of the central hall, framed by victorious flags, designed by Grigorije Samojlov. [24]At that time, he designed the hall for the sessions of the Council of Ministers of the Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia (1947) from the interior in the style of academism. [24]
During 1946-1947, he was hired several times by the Ministry of Post, both for interior works and for competitions for postal buildings. This is how the project of the Post Office building in Ohrid (1946), in Novi Sad (1947)[24] and the Post Office II for Skopje were created.[25]
The project for works on the internal reconstruction and alteration of the SANU building, after the war destruction in the Second World War, was carried out in 1950, and in 1967 the project of the SANU Gallery was carried out. He remodelled the interior of the old General Staff building in Kneza Miloša Street (1951), the halls and halls of the JNA House in Niš (1953). [26]
He is the author of the artistic design of the Order of the War Flag, according to the competition from 1953.
One of the most significant projects in the post-war period was the Faculty of Mechanical Engineering in Belgrade. The conceptual design (1955) included one of the first solutions with large façade steel surfaces. [27]The interior solution is also interesting, especially the visibility and lighting of the hall, which gives the impression that the staircase is hovering over thin concrete pillars. [28]
The building was moved in in 1960. The Jugobanka building in Kralja Petra Street (formerly Ulica 7 jula) was built in 1960 and is the first glass building in Belgrade to reflect the facades of 19th-century buildings. [29]
He participated in the reconstruction of the Hotel Moscow. He is the author of stained glass on Serbian glass, in the corridors, based on Russian motifs.
He authored about 180 projects in six decades.[30] He retired in 1974.[31]
He died in 1989 in Belgrade. He was buried in the Russian necropolis within the New Cemetery in Belgrade.[32]
References
- Translated and adapted from Serbian Wikipedia: https://sr.wikipedia.org/sr-el/%D0%93%D1%80%D0%B8%D0%B3%D0%BE%D1%80%D0%B8%D1%98%D0%B5_%D0%A1%D0%B0%D0%BC%D0%BE%D1%98%D0%BB%D0%BE%D0%B2
- ↑ https://actual-art.org/files/sb/06/Prosen.pdf
- ↑ http://www.vreme.com/cms/view.php?id=456255%7C accessdate = 30. 11. 2013| last = Ћирић| first = Соња|editor1-first=Милан Милошевић|editor1-last=Марија Видић| publisher = НП ”Време” д.о.о.| location = Београд| issn = 0353-8028}}
- ↑ http://hhsbl.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=5&Itemid=5&lang=sr%7C work = hhsbl.org| publisher = Саборни храм Христа Спаситеља| accessdate = 24 November 2013| author = Радмила Кулунџија, Радмила Кулунџија| location = Бања Лука}}
- ↑ http://beogradskonasledje.rs/arhiva-2/crkva-sv-arhandjela-gavrila%7C work = beogradskonasledje.rs| publisher = Завод за заштиту споменика културе града Београда| accessdate = 28 November 2013}}
- ↑ http://www.rts.rs/page/tv/ci/story/254/1145382/Стварање+у+сенци+-+Григорије+Самојлов.html%7C work = rts.rs| publisher = РТС| accessdate = 1 December 2013| date = 30 July 2012.}}
- ↑ name='"време"'
- ↑ http://www.beogradskagroblja.rs/page/знамените-личности/100142/cnt/григорије-самојлов.sr-Cyrl-CS.htm%7C work = beogradskagroblja.rs| publisher = ЈКП ”Погребне услуге” - Београд| accessdate = 24. 11. 2013}}
- ↑ Дијана Милашиновић Марић 2011, pp. 10.
- ↑ name='"забавник"'
- ↑ name='"време"'
- ↑ 11.0 11.1 Милан Просен 2006, pp. 454.
- ↑ name='"време"'
- ↑ name='"забавник"'
- ↑ 14.0 14.1 Милан Просен 2001, pp. 90.
- ↑ name='"време"'
- ↑ Милан Просен 2001, pp. 93.
- ↑ http://hhsbl.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=5&Itemid=5&lang=sr&limitstart=3%7C work = hhsbl.org| publisher = Српска православна црква - Епархија Бањалучка| accessdate = 1. 12. 2013| last = Кулунџија| first = Радмила| last2 = Радујковић | first2 = Ратко | location = Бања Лука| pages = 4-}}
- ↑ http://www.vucje.com/html/mita_t.html%7C work = vucje.com| accessdate = 2 December 2013| location = Вучје| year = 2004|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131203041958/http://www.vucje.com/html/mita_t.html%7Carchive-date = 03 December 2013|url-status=dead|df=}}
- ↑ name="споменик"
- ↑ http://www.nadlanu.com/pocetna/Arhitekta-Grigorije-Samojlov-1904-1989.a-2400.43.html%7C work = nadlanu.com| accessdate = 30. 11. 2013| location = Београд| date = 17. 5. 2006| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20131203023050/http://www.nadlanu.com/pocetna/Arhitekta-Grigorije-Samojlov-1904-1989.a-2400.43.html%7C archive-date = 03. 12. 2013|url-status=dead| df = }}
- ↑ http://glassrbije.org/privreda/turisti%C4%8Dki-potencijali%7C work = glassrbije.org| publisher = Међународна радио Србија| accessdate = 28 November 2013| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20131203192704/http://glassrbije.org/privreda/turisti%C4%8Dki-potencijali%7C archive-date = 03 December 2013|url-status=dead| df = }}
- ↑ http://www.politika.rs/rubrike/Beograd/Ikonostas-izradjen-u-logoru.sr.html%7C work = politika.rs| publisher = Политика| accessdate = 30 November 2013| last = Васиљевић| first = Бранка| date = 7 January 2012}}
- ↑ name="туризам"
- ↑ 24.0 24.1 24.2 Милан Просен 2007, pp. 108.
- ↑ Милан Просен 2007, pp. 109.
- ↑ Милан Просен 2001, pp. 91.
- ↑ http://www.mas.bg.ac.rs/fakultet/istorija.html%7C work = mas.bg.ac.rs| publisher = Универзитет у Београду, Машински факултет| accessdate = 30. 11. 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131203000106/http://www.mas.bg.ac.rs/fakultet/istorija.html%7Carchive-date = 03 December 2013|url-status=dead|df=}}
- ↑ http://ambasadarusije.rs/sr/o-ruskom-nekropolju-u-beogradu%7C work = ambasadarusije.rs| publisher = Амбасада Русије у Републици Србији| accessdate = 2. 12. 2013}}
- ↑ http://ambasadarusije.rs/sr/o-ruskom-nekropolju-u-beogradu%7C work = ambasadarusije.rs| publisher = Амбасада Русије у Републици Србији| accessdate = 2. 12. 2013}}
- ↑ name='"време"'
- ↑ Милан Просен 2011, pp. 90.
- ↑ http://ambasadarusije.rs/sr/o-ruskom-nekropolju-u-beogradu%7C work = ambasadarusije.rs| publisher = Амбасада Русије у Републици Србији| accessdate = 2 December 2013}}
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