{"content":"<div class=\"objectInfo_response\">\n    \n        \n            \n                <div class=\"object\" style=\"width:713px; padding-left: 10px; margin-left:0;\">\n\n                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                \n                                              \n    <div id=\"carousel_2804007922\" class=\"carouselContainer\" style=\"float:right; text-align: center; margin-left: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px;\">\n        <div class=\"carousel\" style=\"width: 176px; height: 222px;\">\n             <ul style=\"width: 176px; height: 222px;\">\n                                                                      \n                <li style=\"; width: 176px; height: 222px;\">\n                        \n                                    \n            \n            <a href=\"/image/2852522220/1\"\n                    rel=\"rr\" onclick=\"return jsiBoxOpen(this)\" id=\"link_2852522220\" title=\"The Turkish Bath built by Monighetti.\"\n                    class=\"image_list_link\">\n                  <div class=\"image_border\">\n                        <img src=\"/image/2852522220/2\" title=\"The Turkish Bath built by Monighetti.\"\n                             id=\"image_2852522220\"\n                             style=\"cursor: hand\" class=\"img_small_list image_with_text\" align=\"middle\" name=\"2852522220\"/>\n                  </div>\n            </a>\n        </li>\n    \n                                                                                           \n                <li style=\"; width: 176px; height: 222px;\">\n                        \n                                    \n            \n            <a href=\"/image/2860064323/1\"\n                    rel=\"rr\" onclick=\"return jsiBoxOpen(this)\" id=\"link_2860064323\" title=\"\"\n                    class=\"image_list_link\">\n                  <div class=\"image_border\">\n                        <img src=\"/image/2860064323/2\" title=\"\"\n                             id=\"image_2860064323\"\n                             style=\"cursor: hand\" class=\"img_small_list image_with_text\" align=\"middle\" name=\"2860064323\"/>\n                  </div>\n            </a>\n        </li>\n    \n                                                       </ul>\n        </div>\n            </div>\n                           \n            <div class=\"objectCommonInfo\">\n                                                                                                                                                                                                                \n                                                                                                        MONIGHETTI Ippolit Antonovich (1819-1878, St. Petersburg), architect, aquarellist, teacher, associate academy member (1847), professor (1858), court architect (1860). Adherent of Eclecticism, predominantly of the \"second Baroque\", interior designer and decorator. Monighetti is a descendent of a Russified family of Italian merchants. Graduated from the Stroganov Academy in Moscow (1835) and the Academy of Fine Arts (1839). A student of A.P. Brullov. In 1839-47, lived in Europe. Since 1848, was appointed architect of the Ministry of the Imperial Court and Principalities; worked in Tsarskoe Selo, where he erected the stylized Turkish Bath Pavilion in the park (1850-52), in the town itself, he built over 30 apartment houses (among those remaining is the mansion and summer cottage of Princess Z.I. Yusupova, 1856-59). He masterfully employed various historical styles. In the 1850s-60s he designed the interiors of Yusupov Palace on the Moika River, Mariinsky Palace, Anichkov Palace, Stroganov Mansion in St. Petersburg and of the Catherine Palace in Tsarskoe Selo. In the so-called second Baroque he built Dyleev's mansion (1859, 155 Obvodny Canal Embankment), Zerebtsova's apartment house (1852-54, 9 Gorokhovaya Street), in early Neoclassicism, M.V. Vorontsova's Palace. (1856-57, 106 Moika River Embankment). Engaged in designing household goods. Since 1868, lived in his own mansion in Tsarskoe Selo (has not survived). Buried at the Shuvalovskoe Cemetery.<br/><br/>Reference: Листов В. Н. Ипполит Монигетти. Л., 1976; Зодчие Санкт-Петербурга, XIX - начало ХХ века. СПб., 1998. С. 1013-1014.<br/><br/>V. V. Antonov.\n                                                                       <div class=\"border\">\n                         <br/>\n                     </div>\n                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                               \n                                                                                                                        \n                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    </div>\n\n            <div style=\"clear:both; height:0;\"><br/></div>\n        </div>\n    </div>\n","id_object":2804007922}