52 Stitches

Combining a fascination for Russian avant-garde architecture and a love of embroidery, Sasha Braulov recreates the monumental forms of constructivist buildings in traditional needlework techniques

 

embroidery by Sasha Braulov

The Tower of the ‘Krasny Gvozdilshik’ (‘Red Nailer’) Ya.Chernikhov. 1930-1931. Saint-Petersburg

 

 

Sasha honed his skills as an embroiderer as a small child in Leningrad. It was a kindergarten staple to learn the skill. Emroidery calls for patience and calm but around Sasha everything was imploding as the state and the system came to an end. This was bound to have an impact.

 

 

embroidery by Sasha Braulov

Red Flag Textile Factory, by Erich Mendelsohn. 1926. Saint-Petersburg.

 

Wind forward to 2015, together with his wife Nastya Kopteva, Sasha founded 52Factory

‘Its mission is to give a tangible form to lost, collapsing and unrealized architecture and to draw attention to the problem of the disappearance of unique buildings of an era of innovation and experimentation’.

52Factory has been designing a range of objects referencing that period and scored a big hit with their City Perpetual Calendar, a staple in the MoMa Store in New York. However, Sasha was looking for a different expression and returned to embroidery four years ago building a bridge between architecture and the decorative arts.

 

embroidery by Sasha Braulov

The White Tower, by M. Reicher. 1929. Yekaterinburg

 

He explains,

‘I have been embroidering both famous and little-known projects from the 1920s and 1930s. The objects are geographically scattered throughout the former USSR – from Minsk to Khabarovsk and from Murmansk to Tashkent. Some of them were demolished or significantly rebuilt, and some remained at the design stage’.

It seems that embroidery as an art form is evolving; once the sole domain of women, today, Sasha explains ‘more and more men are interested in this craft’.

 

embroidery by Sasha Braulov

Melnikov’s own residence, by Konstantin Melnikov. 1927-1929ss. Moscow.

 

Each embroidery (and there are more than 230) takes up to two weeks to complete. What’s so fascinating is the way that they are referencing the urban landscape in an entirely new way. They bring together Russia’s rich history of embroidery and apply it to 20th Century architecture.

For Sasha, the architecture of the avant-garde is an ‘inexhaustible source of inspiration’ ,

 

‘I’m still fascinated by the flight of ideas and the emotional uplift with which people of that time created amazing projects that still cannot be built because the technology is not yet at a sufficient level of development. And all this was created in very difficult times, the Russian empire had collapsed, the First World War recently ended, there was a civil war in the country, there was a famine… It’s amazing’.

 

 

embroidery by Sasha Braulov

 

Sasha shares, ‘I really love the architecture of that era and I want more people to become interested in it. Unfortunately, these unique architectural monuments are often demolished in Russia, which makes me very sad. Perhaps this project will help change the situation, at least a little. As to people, Sasha has embroidery works documenting their lives, too.

 

embroidery by Sasha Braulov

Shukhov Radio Tower Moscow

 

Stitching it all together with Greyscape 

We asked Sasha

Your home City Saint-Petersburg (Leningrad)

Is there a particular architect whose work you are particularly interested in? 

This is a very difficult question. Because I have a lot of them and the list keeps growing: K.S.Melnikov, the Vesnin brothers, Ya.Chernikhov, O.A.Vutke, A.Nikolsky, N.Trotsky, M.Ginzburg… N.F.Demkov and Ivan Leonidov stand apart. The first one created several projects in my native St. Petersburg (Leningrad). Since the mid-1930s, when the avant-garde began to criticize the authorities, he completely stopped doing architecture. During the siege of Leningrad (1941), he died of starvation. A very tragic life.

None of Ivan Leonidov’s projects were implemented. But he gave such a powerful impetus to the development of architecture in general that modern architects and designers are still inspired by his works.

embroidery by Sasha Braulov

The Mergasovsky’s House, by P.T. Speransky, S.V. Glagolev. 1928. Kazan

 

How are the arts supported in Russia?

There are various foundations and organizations that support artists. Festivals are often held and exhibitions are arranged in galleries and museums. To a greater extent, this is all done by enthusiasts.

 

embroidery by Sasha Braulov

The House-Commune ‘The Paris Commune’, by O.A.Vutke. 1931-1933ss. Smolensk

 

Regional food you think we must try? okroshka

Favourite film There are a lot of such films. The five most important ones for me at the moment are:

Ivan’s Childhood (Andrei Tarkovsky),  My Friend Ivan Lapshin (Aleksei German), 

Akira (Katsuhiro Otomo),  Love Actually (Richard Curtis), Porco Rosso (Hayao Miyazaki) etc

Fav book  I really love Russian classical literature. especially such authors as F.M.Dostoevsky, I.S. Turgenev, A.P. Chekhov… I also like the books of Kobo Abe, James Joyce, Kafka, Virginia Wolf, Yasunari Kawabata, Yukio Mishima etc

Where in the world would you like to visit  Many places! Japan, Great Britain, Chile, Uzbekistan. I would also like to travel more actively in Russia. I would still be happy to return to those places where I have already managed to visit: Hong Kong, Georgia, Cuba… but first on this list is Japan

 

embroidery by Sasha Braulov

Pavilion of the Soviet Union, by Konstantin Melnikov (destroyed). 1925. Paris.

 

Finding Sasha

Instagram @sashabraulov

https://vk.com/sashabraulov

Facebook @sasha.braulov

If you would like to purchase one of the embroideries direct message Sasha and Factory52.

embroidery by Sasha Braulov

The Factory-Kitchen, by Eketerina Maksimova. 1931. Samara.

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