Monument to Osip and Nadezhda Mandelstam "Monument to Love"

Universitetskaya Embankment, 7/9, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 199034

In the courtyard of the Twelve Collegia building of St. Petersburg State University, a monument to Osip and Nadezhda Mandelstam has been unveiled. The composition, created by Dutch sculptor Hanneke de Munck, is called "Monument to Love." It is a bronze allegorical bowl about three meters high, from which a tree rises upwards. The poet Osip Mandelstam and his wife, Nadezhda, with whom he was often separated, are reunited, as if floating above this bowl in the air: angel wings are on their backs, and the poet holds sheets of manuscripts in his hands. The pedestal for the Mandelstam couple was made by St. Petersburg sculptor Khachatur Bely.

In the courtyard of the Twelve Collegia building of St. Petersburg State University, a monument to Osip and Nadezhda Mandelstam has been unveiled. The composition, created by Dutch sculptor Hanneke de Munck, is called the "Monument to Love." It is a bronze allegorical bowl about three meters high, from which a tree rises upwards. The poet Osip Mandelstam and his wife, Nadezhda, from whom he was often separated, are reunited as if floating above this bowl in the air: angel wings are behind their backs, and the poet holds sheets of manuscripts in his hands. The pedestal for the Mandelstam couple was made by St. Petersburg sculptor Khachatur Bely.

"Why was the sculpture given this name? Because only thanks to the love of Osip and Nadezhda Mandelstam does the great poet’s work remain alive," says Hanneke de Munck. According to her, air is the natural environment of poetry for Mandelstam, which is why the sculpture received such a plastic solution. "Mandelstam’s poetry fills one with love for life and love for culture; he wanted this love to continue," says the sculptor.

As noted by the Consul General of the Netherlands in St. Petersburg, Anthony M. Van der Togt, Mandelstam’s poetry is known in the Netherlands, and the story of Osip and Nadezhda Mandelstam is "part not only of Russian but also of world culture." Hanneke de Munck and her husband, graphic artist Sytse H. Bakker, who uses lines from Mandelstam’s works in his creations, plan to install a second monument to Osip and Nadezhda Mandelstam in the Netherlands, thus completing the "Monument to Love" project.


"I want students who pass by this monument to remember their history, to know that Mandelstam’s fate was monstrous, and only Nadezhda was able to prolong his creative life," said Professor Tatiana Yuryeva, director of the "Diaghilev Center," at the monument’s unveiling ceremony. Nadezhda Mandelstam lived until 1980 and devoted herself to preserving her husband’s legacy. Her memoirs are considered not only an indispensable source for studying Osip Mandelstam’s work but also a literary monument and a significant historical testimony of the Soviet era.

 

Sources:

https://spbu.ru/news-events/novosti/v-spbgu-otkryli-pamyatnik-osipu-i-nadezhde-mandelshtam

https://www.newsru.com/cinema/28sep2015/osip.html
"Diaghilev Center" Tatiana Yuryeva

Follow us on social media

More stories from St. Petersburg of Osip Mandelstam

The Childhood of Osip

Zagorodny Prospekt, 70, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190013

The first address in Petersburg

Childhood of Osip

Zagorodny Prospekt, 70, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190013

The first address in Petersburg

Youth and Studies

Mokhovaya St., 33, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191028

A smart and capable boy, but… also very proud.

Universities and the Formation of the Poet

Zagorodny Prospekt, 17, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191002

Your face is more tender than tender, Your hand is whiter than white,

Revolution and the years leading up to the Great Terror

Nevsky Ave., 15, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191186

Ah, forget it… Just so I don’t have to have breakfast with him…

Visiting my brother

8th Line V.O., 31, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 199004

I returned to my city, familiar to tears

Internal Immigrants 1924

Fontanka River Embankment, 2, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191187

This is how the Silver Age was dying...

Epigram on Stalin, the arrest and death of the poet

Griboedov Canal Embankment, 9, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191186

We live without feeling the land beneath us, Our voices cannot be heard from ten steps away.

An Epigram on Stalin, the Arrest, and the Death of the Poet

Griboedov Canal Embankment, 9, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191186

We live without feeling the land beneath us, Our voices cannot be heard from ten steps away.

Pharmacists and the Stray Dog 1911-1912

pl. Iskusstv, 5, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191186

Any "wanderer," but necessarily a creative person, could come into the basement and warm up.

Revolution, the End of Youthful Illusions 1917-1918

Botkinskaya St., 17, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 194044

On the Drawbridge On a day that has now become a holiday, My youth came to an end...

Monument to Osip and Nadezhda Mandelstam in Amsterdam

Nadezjda Mandelstam Street 16, 1102 JK Amsterdam, Netherlands

On September 25, 2015, a monument to Osip and Nadezhda Mandelstam was unveiled in Amsterdam. This is the sixth monument to the poet in the world and the first outside Russia.