Leon Benois
Leon Benois | |
---|---|
Леонтий Бенуа | |
Born | Petergof, Saint Petersburg Governorate, Russian Empire | 11 August 1856
Died | 8 February 1928 Leningrad, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union | (aged 71)
Education | Member Academy of Arts (1885) Professor by rank (1892) Full Member Academy of Arts (1893) |
Alma mater | Imperial Academy of Arts (1879) |
Known for | Architecture |
Awards |
Leon or Leonty Nikolayevich Benois (Russian: Леонтий Николаевич Бенуа, romanized: Leonty Nikolayevich Benua; 23 August [O.S. 11 August] 1856 – 8 February 1928)[1] was a Russian architect from the Benois family.
Biography
He was the son of architect Nicholas Benois, the brother of artists Alexandre Benois and Albert Benois. He built the Roman Catholic cathedral of Notre-Dame in St Petersburg, the mausoleum of the Grand Dukes of Russia in the Peter and Paul Fortress, the Russian Chapel in Darmstadt, and the Alexander Nevsky Cathedral, Warsaw, among many other works. Benois served as Dean of the Imperial Academy of Arts (1903–06, 1911–17) and edited the architecture magazine Zodchii. He gave his name to Leonardo da Vinci's painting Benois Madonna which he inherited from his father-in-law and presented to the Hermitage Museum. The painter Nadia Benois was his daughter,[2] and the actor Sir Peter Ustinov was his grandson.
See also
References
- ^ Pooler, Richard Shaw (2014). Leonardo da Vinci's treatise of painting: the story of the world's greatest treatise on painting - its origins, history, content, and influence. Wilmington, Delaware: Vernon Press. p. 292. ISBN 1622730178.
- ^ Koralbelʹnikova, Lûdmila Zinovʹevna; Winestein, Anna; Hershman, Suellen (2008). Alexander Tcherepnin: the saga of a Russian émigré composer. Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University press. p. 11. ISBN 9780253349385.