Vasily (Wilhelm)[1] Fyodorovich von Baumgarten (Russian: Василий (Вильгельм) Фёдорович фон Баумгартен; October 30 [17], 1879 — May 13, 1962) was Russian Empire and Yugoslavianarchitect and military engineer.[2]
During the Russo-Japanese War (1904–05) Vasily Baumgarten served in the Vladivostok Fortress, then in 1908–1914 he worked in the city administration of St. Petersburg and he taught at his alma mater as associate professor. Baumgarten has taken part in construction of Naval and artillery ranges, then together with Vladimir Apyshkov built the house of Peter Stenbock-Fermore in St. Petersburg in 1913–14, later he also built several private houses in Pavlovsk.[2]
The interbellum politics of Vasily Baumgarten were panslavistic.[5] Among other things he also took part in the Association of Russian artists in the Kingdom of SCS' exhibition in 1928 and the Great Exhibition of Russian Art in 1930 in Belgrade, in 1930–31 Vasily became a member of the art group К.Р.У.Г.[2] He was also a leader of the voluntary support group for the students of Nikolaevsky Engineering School and the Academy.[1]
Here is the list of key Yugoslav architectural projects executed by Vasily Baumgarten:[2]
Branch building of the State Mortgage Bank in Pančevo (1940; together with the engineer Solodov).
The last years of his life
For a long time in Yugoslavia it was believed the architect Baumgarten has not survived World War II times, although the date and place of his death haven't been known.[4] However, later it turned out that after 1945 Wilhelm Baumgarten emigrated to Argentina together with his family. The last years of his life he spent in Buenos Aires.[3] There Baumgarten served as a chairman of The Gallipoli Association [ru] in South America and (since 1949) was the leader of the Peter Wrangel's Russian All-Military Union local department.[1]
Vasily Baumgarten married shortly before the October Revolution in Russia. Xenia (Kika) Michaylovna Benois (1894–1965), last name changed to Baumgarten as she got married, was his wife, a niece of the artist Alexandre Benois.[7] The couple had sons and there is an information of a granddaughter named Marina.[4]