In 1955, Sergey Sergeyev-Tsensky received a set of furniture — a sofa and three armchairs — from the Union of Soviet Writers for his 80th birthday and placed it in his study. The sofa with a high backrest is covered in light brown leatherette; there is a mirror on the top, flanked by glazed drawers; the armrests are shaped like bolsters. The furniture is an example of the Stalinist Empire style. It was called Stalinist because it was used to decorate the offices of Soviet party members and the creative elite of the 1930s–1950s.
Upholstered sofa
I need to live another
three or four years to finish an epic, unparalleled either in volume or content
quality, but now I see that I will not have those three or four years. (Sergey-Tsensky shared his sad thoughts with the writer Yevgeny Fyodorov in his
letter from October 13, 1958.) So, I guess, that is how things are going to be!
Krymizdat [a publishing house in Crimea] is expecting three novels from me,
which will be included in the 4th cycle of ‘Russia’s
Transfiguration’ and will complete the first half of the epic (200 printed
sheets). I hope that by 1959, I will manage to finish all these 200 sheets and
have 60 left to go and 60 more to add. If I do not make it till then, will
there ever be anyone to finish them for me?
Upholstered sofa
