Fyodor Osipovich Schechtel was a Russian architect, graphic artist and stage designer, the most influential and prolific master of Russian Art Nouveau and late Russian Revival architecture.
Portrait, 1890s
Rebuilding Moscow Art Theater was Schechtel's tribute to the artistic Moscow of the 1880s that shaped his talent, with contributions by Anna Golubkina and Ivan Fomin
Zinaida Morozova Palace, 1893
Levenson Printshop, Moscow (1900)
Art Nouveau architecture in Russia
Art Nouveau is an international style of art, architecture and applied arts, especially the decorative arts, that was most popular between 1893 and 1910. In the Russian language it is called Art Nouveau or Modern.
Main staircase of Ryabushinsky House (now Gorky Museum), Moscow by Fyodor Schechtel (1900)
Teremok House in Talashkino, by Sergey Malyutin (1901–1902). Art Nouveau meets Russian Revival style
Vitebsky railway station, by Sima Mihash and Stanislav Brzozowski (1904)
Hauswald summer house – the first Art Nouveau building in Russia