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30 Old Dachas That Look Like Pictures From A Fairytale Captured By This Russian Photographer
Interview With ArtistIf you take photographs just for fun and to preserve memories, your photo collection would include so many different places, faces, and backgrounds. However, professional photographers often have a niche in which they specialize, like nature photographers or some photographers who only like shooting sunsets or people.
Russian photographer Fyodor Savintsev also has a particular interest which he shows on his Instagram. He really has a focus on old dachas in the rural areas of Russia and the breathtaking photos have already amassed 122k followers.
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Fyodor Savintsev has a background in photojournalism and has worked with such agencies as Agence France Press, the Associated Press, TIME, the New York Times, The Guardian, Le Monde, Forbes, Newsweek, GEO Russia, Russian Reporter, Esquire. He was also the chief photographer for ITAR-TASS, the largest Russian news agency and one of the largest news agencies worldwide.
Since 2011, he is more focused on his own projects rather than working for someone and one of them is capturing old dachas in Russia. Fyodor told the European Heritage Tribune (EHT) how it all started. It’s actually not an old project. Due to the pandemic, Fyodor temporarily moved to his parents’ dacha and the childhood nostalgia prompted him to investigate dacha architecture.
Bored Panda reached out to Fyodor and he told us about how he created the project, “At first, I made a big project about the vernacular architecture of garden houses "6 acres" in the Arkhangelsk region. I was inspired by the process of painting unusual houses. Returning to the Moscow region, I began to explore the old country villages and found a lot of houses with unusual architecture, I began to catalog them, they were included in the project "Kratovsky dachas", which was exhibited at the end of the summer at the Shchusev State Museum of Architecture.”
We were also curious how he finds the dachas and turns out, he just simply travels a lot and during those travels, he comes across a lot of old cottages. The ones that attract him the most are “pre-revolutionary architecture that are elegant houses with a well-thought-out layout and decor aesthetics.”
We asked him if he has a dacha that is his favorite and he answered that he really likes all the cottages he photographs. But if he had to choose, he said that “there is one house from Arkhangelsk that evokes very abstract feelings, and there is another old dacha that was designed by the architect Vashkov, he was a student of the artist Vasnetsov, there are many symbols and signs in the house. Such a mixture of modern and Russian style.”
What is so fascinating about old houses in rural areas, you would think? For Fyodor, the most surprising thing about seeing those beautiful cottages that can be up to a century old is that “very little time has passed, about 100 years, but people have lost their sense of beauty, stopped decorating their homes, although it has always been customary. Architecture has gone from elegance to utilitarianism.”
People can take from these photos whatever they want but artists often have their own intentions and Fyodor explained what are his: “I really want people to start getting inspired, I have collected a large collection of houses for them. These are examples to follow because many people live in their homes all their lives, so why can't it be done beautifully. I also know many examples when my photos and stories inspired people to buy old houses and restore them.”
What was your first reaction when you saw these photos? Comment which of these would you love to live in and upvote the photos that made you really appreciate the beauty of the architecture. And if you would like to see more similar photographs or see what other things Fyodor is up to, you can follow him on Instagram @fsavintsev.
Finally, a glimpse inside! Look at those gorgeous floors & how thick that door is. Were these originally summer cottages for the rich, or year-round homes? Love the widow walk, too
Well on the bright side it has a stable foundation and doesn't look like the roof caved in so probably salvageable!
Load More Replies...Love that ivy-covered porch and upper deck/porch. I hope it’s saved & renovated completely.
Interesting buildings from a part of the world that most outsiders know little about. The lace work around windows etc. gives a fairytale look.
Lace work around windows and roofs is traditional in Russia.
Load More Replies...Positive? It´s great architecture, an art, no doubt, but they are ruins (most of it). I see no sense for preservation, typical for the post communist countries. I think it's one of the greatest crimes of communism - it had no sense of beauty and left everything nice to die and decay.
Load More Replies...Not to be rude, but the photography itself is not anything special. The houses are amazing. Composition, lighting, etc are subpar at best.
These houses are beautiful, so sad to see so many of them clearly abandoned and in decay.
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Wow, they are beautiful. I thought all dacsa are little wooden cabins, like the ones built in Hungary in the 70's.
I miss here an explanation what a dacha is. It is a summerhouse. A well-to-do families build those mainly in the woods outside of a town. So these aren't village houses.
These cottages are some of the most beautiful, whimsically designed homes fit for a princess right out of a modern day fairytale 🪄 thank you for sharing these!
We have Dachas in East Germany. They are one-storey shacks. Primitive bathroom and kitcchen, sometims even an oven, but they are super simple. I can't believe some of these beauts. incredible.
Anybody who enjoyed this should see the Russian film, “Burnt by the Sun”. Beautifully atmospheric and leads into the dark days of Russia.
Man Why are these just vacation homes? I'd love in any of these bad boys all year long!
I believe claustrophobia is a fear of enclosed and small spaces, but i dont see any enclosed spaces tho ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Load More Replies...Interesting buildings from a part of the world that most outsiders know little about. The lace work around windows etc. gives a fairytale look.
Lace work around windows and roofs is traditional in Russia.
Load More Replies...Positive? It´s great architecture, an art, no doubt, but they are ruins (most of it). I see no sense for preservation, typical for the post communist countries. I think it's one of the greatest crimes of communism - it had no sense of beauty and left everything nice to die and decay.
Load More Replies...Not to be rude, but the photography itself is not anything special. The houses are amazing. Composition, lighting, etc are subpar at best.
These houses are beautiful, so sad to see so many of them clearly abandoned and in decay.
Thank you for your valuable information. I got more ideas from your blog content. Keep sharing such good content. abogado de divorcio condado de bergen nueva jersey
Wow, they are beautiful. I thought all dacsa are little wooden cabins, like the ones built in Hungary in the 70's.
I miss here an explanation what a dacha is. It is a summerhouse. A well-to-do families build those mainly in the woods outside of a town. So these aren't village houses.
These cottages are some of the most beautiful, whimsically designed homes fit for a princess right out of a modern day fairytale 🪄 thank you for sharing these!
We have Dachas in East Germany. They are one-storey shacks. Primitive bathroom and kitcchen, sometims even an oven, but they are super simple. I can't believe some of these beauts. incredible.
Anybody who enjoyed this should see the Russian film, “Burnt by the Sun”. Beautifully atmospheric and leads into the dark days of Russia.
Man Why are these just vacation homes? I'd love in any of these bad boys all year long!
I believe claustrophobia is a fear of enclosed and small spaces, but i dont see any enclosed spaces tho ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Load More Replies...