Avraam Melnikov
![Avraam Melnikov; portrait<br/>by [[Vasily Khudyakov]] (1851)](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/cc/Vasily_Khudyakov%2C_Avraam_Melnikov%2C_1851%2C_Russian_Academy_of_Arts_Museum_%D0%9A%D0%9F-775_16._%D0%96-185.jpg)
Melnikov collaborated with sculptor Ivan Martos on the pedestals for his statues of Minin and Pozharsky in Red Square and Duc de Richelieu at the top of the Potemkin Stairs in Odessa. Apart from the Imperial School of Jurisprudence and the Old Believer Church of St. Nicholas (later converted into the Arctic and Antarctic Museum), Melnikov's major buildings are in New Russia and the Volga provinces.
The Saviour Cathedral in Rybinsk is based on Melnikov's design that had won the architectural competition for St. Isaac's Cathedral in St. Petersburg. It was also Melnikov who won the competition for the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour in Moscow. Neither design was approved by Alexander I of Russia. His successor, Nicholas I, also preferred the Russo-Byzantine designs of Konstantin Thon to the supposedly ponderous Late Neoclassical style espoused by Melnikov. Provided by Wikipedia
-
1