Rear-front Memorial
The Rear-front Memorial (Russian: Памятник «Тыл — фронту») is a bronze and granite monument located in the city of Magnitogorsk, Russia, sculpted by Lev Golovnitsky and drawn by Yakov Belopolsky. It is considered the first part of a triptych, also consisting of The Motherland Calls in Volgograd and Warrior Liberator in Treptower Park, Berlin. This monument was unveiled in 1979.[1] By the time of construction of the monument, the author of the other two monuments, Evgeniy Vuchetich, had already died.
Rear-front Memorial | |
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Magnitogorsk | |
For The "Great Patriotic War". | |
Unveiled | 1979 |
Location | 53°24′26″N 58°59′33″E near |
Designed by | Lev Golovnitsky and Yakov Belopolsky |
The monument is composed of a worker and a warrior. The worker is oriented to the east, towards the Magnitogorsk Iron and Steel Works. The warrior is facing the west, to the side of the "Great Patriotic War". The three monuments are made to symbolize the sword being forged in Magnitogorsk, raised in The Motherland Calls in Volgograd (then Stalingrad) and finally dropped to the ground after the victory in Berlin as a part of Warrior Liberator. The composition also includes a stone flower made from Karelian granite with an eternal flame.
References
- Jahn, Peter (2005). Триумф и боль: советская и постсоветская память о войне 1941-1945. Ch. Links Verlag. p. 109. ISBN 9783861533566.