{"id":7714,"date":"2020-12-07T16:47:00","date_gmt":"2020-12-07T14:47:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/giftedsofia.com\/?post_type=product&p=7714"},"modified":"2023-12-30T15:19:17","modified_gmt":"2023-12-30T13:19:17","slug":"concrete-siberia","status":"publish","type":"product","link":"https:\/\/www.giftedsofia.com\/en\/shop\/books\/concrete-siberia\/","title":{"rendered":"Concrete Siberia"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/p>\n
Authors:\u00a0Zupagrafika & Alexander Veryovkin<\/p>\n
ISBN: 9788395057465<\/p>\n
Publisher:\u00a0Zupagrafika<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
Hardcover<\/p>\n
160 Pages<\/p>\n
Size: 17 x 24 cm<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
Language: English<\/p>\n
Released: 2020<\/p>\n
# Photography # Sibera # Soviet Architecture<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
From the Ural Mountains to the Arctic Circle, the book features the extensive\u00a0microrayons<\/em>\u00a0of Siberia\u2019s urban centres, the brutal landscapes of industrial monotowns, cosmic circuses, concrete theatres and opera houses, as well as prefabricated panel blocks, or\u00a0panelki<\/em>, erected on permafrost.<\/p>\n Divided into 6 chapters,\u00a0Concrete Siberia<\/em>\u00a0by Zupagrafika contains over 100 photographs taken by Russian photographer Alexander Veryovkin, capturing the stark splendour of post-war modernist architecture scattered around the cities of\u00a0Novosibirsk<\/strong>,\u00a0Omsk<\/strong>,\u00a0Krasnoyarsk<\/strong>,\u00a0Norilsk<\/strong>,\u00a0Irkutsk<\/strong>\u00a0and\u00a0Yakutsk<\/strong>\u00a0and the quotidian lives of their inhabitants.<\/p>\n Includes a foreword by architectural critic Konstantin Budarin, orientative maps and informative texts on the featured cities and buildings.<\/p>\n \u2013 Excerpt from the foreword<\/p>\n \u2013<\/strong> \u2013 Authors:\u00a0Zupagrafika & Alexander Veryovkin<\/p>\n ISBN: 9788395057465<\/p>\n Publisher:\u00a0Zupagrafika<\/p>\n<\/div>\n Hardcover<\/p>\n 160 Pages<\/p>\n Size: 17 x 24 cm<\/p>\n<\/div>\n Language: English<\/p>\n Released: 2020<\/p>\n # Photography # Sibera # Soviet Architecture<\/p>\n<\/div>\n From the Ural Mountains to the Arctic Circle, the book features the extensive\u00a0microrayons<\/em>\u00a0of Siberia\u2019s urban centres, the brutal landscapes of industrial monotowns, cosmic circuses, concrete theatres and opera houses, as well as prefabricated panel blocks, or\u00a0panelki<\/em>, erected on permafrost.<\/p>\n Divided into 6 chapters,\u00a0Concrete Siberia<\/em>\u00a0by Zupagrafika contains over 100 photographs taken by Russian photographer Alexander Veryovkin, capturing the stark splendour of post-war modernist architecture scattered around the cities of\u00a0Novosibirsk<\/strong>,\u00a0Omsk<\/strong>,\u00a0Krasnoyarsk<\/strong>,\u00a0Norilsk<\/strong>,\u00a0Irkutsk<\/strong>\u00a0and\u00a0Yakutsk<\/strong>\u00a0and the quotidian lives of their inhabitants.<\/p>\n Includes a foreword by architectural critic Konstantin Budarin, orientative maps and informative texts on the featured cities and buildings.<\/p>\n \u2013 Excerpt from the foreword<\/p>\n \u2013<\/strong> \u2013 <\/p>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" Authors:\u00a0Zupagrafika & Alexander Veryovkin<\/p>\n ISBN: 9788395057465<\/p>\n Publisher:\u00a0Zupagrafika<\/p>\n<\/div>\n Hardcover<\/p>\n 160 Pages<\/p>\n Size: 17 x 24 cm<\/p>\n<\/div>\n Language: English<\/p>\n Released: 2020<\/p>\n # Photography # Sibera # Soviet Architecture<\/p>\n<\/div>\n From the Ural Mountains to the Arctic Circle, the book features the extensive\u00a0microrayons<\/em>\u00a0of Siberia\u2019s urban centres, the brutal landscapes of industrial monotowns, cosmic circuses, concrete theatres and opera houses, as well as prefabricated panel blocks, or\u00a0panelki<\/em>, erected on permafrost.<\/p>\n Divided into 6 chapters,\u00a0Concrete Siberia<\/em>\u00a0by Zupagrafika contains over 100 photographs taken by Russian photographer Alexander Veryovkin, capturing the stark splendour of post-war modernist architecture scattered around the cities of\u00a0Novosibirsk<\/strong>,\u00a0Omsk<\/strong>,\u00a0Krasnoyarsk<\/strong>,\u00a0Norilsk<\/strong>,\u00a0Irkutsk<\/strong>\u00a0and\u00a0Yakutsk<\/strong>\u00a0and the quotidian lives of their inhabitants.<\/p>\n Includes a foreword by architectural critic Konstantin Budarin, orientative maps and informative texts on the featured cities and buildings.<\/p>\n \u2013 Excerpt from the foreword<\/p>\n \u2013<\/strong>\u200d\u2018Prefabrication and serialisation became the key premises for Soviet urban development when Khrushchev came to power. For Siberia, it meant a new wave of colonisation. \u2019<\/em><\/h3>\n
\nAuthors:\u00a0<\/strong>Zupagrafika (David Navarro & Martyna Sobecka); Alexander Veryovkin (Photography)
\nForeword:\u00a0<\/strong>Konstantin Budarin
\nPublisher:<\/strong>\u00a0Zupagrafika \u00a9 2020. All rights reserved\u200d<\/strong><\/p>\n
\nBackground info
\n\u200d<\/strong>After the release of their photobook\u00a0Eastern Blocks<\/em><\/a>, Zupagrafika went on to explore the post-war modernism of Siberia. David and Martyna selected a number of cities and locations and invited Alexander to capture them. The coldest city the photographer visited while shooting was Yakutsk. The temperature reached – 30 degrees Celsius.<\/p>\n<\/div>\nSoviet Landscapes of the Far North<\/strong><\/h4>\n<\/div>\n
A photographic insight into the Soviet-era architecture of one of the most extreme, little-known and vast territories on Earth.<\/h2>\n
\u200d\u2018Prefabrication and serialisation became the key premises for Soviet urban development when Khrushchev came to power. For Siberia, it meant a new wave of colonisation. \u2019<\/em><\/h3>\n
\nAuthors:\u00a0<\/strong>Zupagrafika (David Navarro & Martyna Sobecka); Alexander Veryovkin (Photography)
\nForeword:\u00a0<\/strong>Konstantin Budarin
\nPublisher:<\/strong>\u00a0Zupagrafika \u00a9 2020. All rights reserved\u200d<\/strong><\/p>\n
\nBackground info
\n\u200d<\/strong>After the release of their photobook\u00a0Eastern Blocks<\/em><\/a>, Zupagrafika went on to explore the post-war modernism of Siberia. David and Martyna selected a number of cities and locations and invited Alexander to capture them. The coldest city the photographer visited while shooting was Yakutsk. The temperature reached – 30 degrees Celsius.<\/p>\n<\/div>\nSoviet Landscapes of the Far North<\/strong><\/h4>\n<\/div>\n
A photographic insight into the Soviet-era architecture of one of the most extreme, little-known and vast territories on Earth.<\/h2>\n
\u200d\u2018Prefabrication and serialisation became the key premises for Soviet urban development when Khrushchev came to power. For Siberia, it meant a new wave of colonisation. \u2019<\/em><\/h3>\n
\nAuthors:\u00a0<\/strong>Zupagrafika (David Navarro & Martyna Sobecka); Alexander Veryovkin (Photography)
\nForeword:\u00a0<\/strong>Konstantin Budarin
\nPublisher:<\/strong>\u00a0Zupagrafika \u00a9 2020. All rights reserved\u200d<\/strong><\/p>\n