Continuing our theme of the decline of architecture, literature, and the visual arts under Stalin, it is perhaps appropriate to post here a document that was printed in order to educate the public on the proposed architectural design of the building. The Architecture of the Palace of the Soviets (Ðрхитектура Дворца Советов) was intended to accomplish this task. In it, numerous architects, some of them having formerly belonged to the now-vanquished Soviet avant-garde, sing the praises of this bizarre, wedding-cake blend of monumentalist gigantism and neoclassical stylization (the columns and lavishly-decorated façades). Some, like Vladimir Paperny, have suggested that Stalin himself might have had a hand in its design, personally stepping in to oversee the realization of Iofan, Fomin, and Shchuko’s abominable vision. Considering the sheer monstrosity of the final structure, it is not too unlikely that this might have been the case. Either way, below you can download a free .pdf file copy of the 1939 text, which sadly includes a declaration from the once-great architectural modernist Nikolai Miliutin written in in support of the final proposal:
Ðрхитектура Дворца Советов (1939)
And the following is a Stalinist propaganda film made a year before this text, in 1938, called New Moscow (ÐÐ¾Ð²Ð°Ñ ÐœÐ¾Ñква), which features both the interior and exterior of the proposed building: