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Andrey Kvasov

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Church on Hay Square in St Petersburg, attributed to Kvasov and demolished by Soviet authorities in the 1930s.

Andrey Vasilievich Kvasov (Russian: Андрей Васильевич Квасов, ca. 1720 – ca. 1770) was a notable Baroque architect who worked in Tsardom of Russia including the territory of Ukraine. Very little is known about his life, and its dates are still uncertain. Only a handful of his buildings, though much altered, still stand.

In 1741, Kvasov helped Mikhail Zemtsov to prepare coronation celebrations in Moscow. Two years later, he was entrusted with interior decoration of the Catherine Palace, which resulted in the Grand Ball Hall and other celebrated rooms. The Saviour Church on Hay Square, Znamenka Palace, and the palace of Aleksey Bestuzhev are also attributed to Kvasov.

Aleksey Razumovsky was Kvasov's long-time employer. In 1748 he went to the court of the Ukrainian hetman Kirill Razumovsky, Aleksey's brother, to design the residences and churches in Baturin, Glukhov, and Koselets. In 1770, he was made Principal Architect of Little Russia. The cathedral in Kozelets is his major surviving work in the Ukrainian Baroque idiom.

Kvasov's younger brother Aleksei is credited with devising the general layout of Kazan (1766), Tver (1767), Astrakhan (1768), Kharkov (1768), and the Admiralty part of St Petersburg.

References

Bibliography

  • Komelova, G. N.; Mirolubova, G. A. (1978). Невский проспект в изобразительном искусстве: XVIII-первая половина XIX века : каталог выставки из фондов отдела истории русской культуры [Nevsky Prospekt in Visual Arts: Eighteenth to first part of the nineteenth century: exhibition catalogue (History of Russian Art Department, State hermitage Museum)]. Leningrad: Aurora. p. 56.
  • Isachenko, Valeriy (2010). Зодчие Санкт-Петербурга XVIII – XX веков [Architects of St Petersburg in the Eighteenth to Twentieth Centuries] (in Russian). Moscow: Tsentrpoligraph. ISBN 978-5-227-02220-2.