Category: Architecture

  • Stripping Down in the Sun, Moscow-Style

    Stripping Down in the Sun, Moscow-Style

    To keep our newsroom in Moscow running, we need your support. With your help, we can continue with our mission to keep you informed with breaking news, business analysis, thought-provoking opinions, the best of culture and insights into everyday life.

  • Get Your Anna Karenina Fix at Yasnaya Polyana

    Get Your Anna Karenina Fix at Yasnaya Polyana

    A new, expanded Tolstoy Theater Festival will take place in Yasnaya Polyana July 4-7. Yasnaya Polyana is the ancestral estate of Leo Tolstoy, which is now a museum that has kept everything exactly as it was in 1910, the year of the writer’s death. Tolstoy’s house, in a beautiful setting not far from Tula, is…

  • On This Day: Ivan Goncharov

    On This Day: Ivan Goncharov

    On June 18, 1812 Russian writer Ivan Goncharov was born in Simbirsk (now Ulyanovsk). Born into a wealthy merchant family, Goncharov went to boarding school and university in Moscow before relocating to St. Petersburg where he worked as a government translator and private tutor. He served for nearly 30 years as an official: first in…

  • ‘Chernobyl: History of a Tragedy’ Wins Pushkin House Prize

    ‘Chernobyl: History of a Tragedy’ Wins Pushkin House Prize

    This year’s winner of the Pushkin House Book Prize is Serhii Plokhy, whose book, “Chernobyl: History of a Tragedy” (Allen Lane) was announced at a ceremony in London on Wednesday. This was the second time Plokhy has won the award. The Pushkin House Book Prize is unique in the world of literary competitions. First, it…

  • Soviet Cartoons Top List of Russians’ Favorites – Poll

    Soviet Cartoons Top List of Russians’ Favorites – Poll

    Russians’ favorite cartoon is the Soviet-era cult favorite “Nu, Pogodi!”according to a new state-run poll published Thursday. “Nu, pogodi!” — which translates into English as “Well, just you wait!” — debuted in 1969 and centers on Wolf’s neverending, futile pursuit of Hare. The wolf resembles a typical Soviet ruffian: He has a low voice, wears…

  • On This Day in 1991 Boris Yeltsin Elected President

    On This Day in 1991 Boris Yeltsin Elected President

    On this day in 1991, Boris Yeltsin was elected president of the R.S.F.S.R. — the Russian republic within the U.S.S.R. In a March referendum the population in Russia had voted to create the office of the president and vice president. The Russian Congress of People’s Deputies then adopted legislation to authorize and organize the elections.…

  • Moscow: The City That Never Sleeps

    Moscow: The City That Never Sleeps

    Nightlife in Moscow is about more than just its nightclubs. The city’s potpourri of activities, people, landmarks and cultures is what it’s already famous for during the day, but when the sun goes down, everything shines in a new light. Here’s a look at what the city does in the shadows:

  • The Tale of ‘The Spy and the Traitor’

    The Tale of ‘The Spy and the Traitor’

    “The Spy and the Traitor” by Ben Macintyre is meticulously researched history narrated by a natural storyteller. Macintyre, a columnist and associate editor of The Times, is the author of ten books about 20th century wars, espionage, spies and a variety of strange and colorful characters. His grasp of the arcane world — and lingo…

  • ‘1983: The World At The Brink’

    ‘1983: The World At The Brink’

    In “1983: The World At The Brink,” Taylor Downing delves into one of the most pivotal years of the Cold War, when escalating brinkmanship between the Soviet Union and the United States nearly caused nuclear apocalypse. Downing is a historian, award-winning television producer and writer who has penned best-selling books on both world wars and…

  • ‘Chernobyl: History of a Tragedy’

    ‘Chernobyl: History of a Tragedy’

    A new history of the world’s worst nuclear accident has emerged from the recent opening of Chernobyl archival materials. In “Chernobyl: History of a Tragedy,” Serhii Plokhy traces how the explosion occurred in 1986, the Soviet government’s crisis management, and the repercussions of the explosion that released radiation equivalent to 500 bombs dropped on Hiroshima.…

  • Moscow Sizzles in Record Temperatures

    Moscow Sizzles in Record Temperatures

    Sweltering summer temperatures came to Moscow this week, with the thermometer reaching a record high of 30 degrees Celsius on Thursday. Muscovites flocked to the city’s parks and fountains in search of any respite they could find. Here’s a look at Russia’s capital during a heat wave:

  • On This Day: Alexander Pushkin

    On This Day: Alexander Pushkin

    Born into a noble Russian family, Alexander Pushkin was the son of Sergei Pushkin, a descendant of a family with Russian nobility tracing back to the 12th century, and Nadezhda Gannibal, a descendant of German and Scandinavian nobility. Pushkin’s maternal great-grandfather Abram Gannibal was an African page who was kidnapped, sent to Constantinople and later…

  • Moscow’s Muslims Celebrate the End of Ramadan

    Moscow’s Muslims Celebrate the End of Ramadan

    Muslims across Moscow came to the Cathedral Mosque at Prospekt Mira, one of the largest mosques in Europe, to celebrate the end of the religious holiday of Ramadan on June 4, 2019. An estimated 200,000 to 320,000 people participated in the celebrations in Moscow.

  • On This Day: Ufa Train Disaster

    On This Day: Ufa Train Disaster

    On June 4, 1989, a railway accident in the Iglinsky District (then the Bashkir A.S.S.R, Soviet Union) killed 575, injuring 800 more. Many passengers were children coming to or from summer camp or holidays by the seaside. It remains the deadliest postwar rail disaster in Russia. While the incident happened about 50 kilometers east of…

  • Muscovites Dash Through Annual Color Run, in Photos

    Muscovites Dash Through Annual Color Run, in Photos

    What’s one way to make running fun? By adding lots of color (literally) to your race. Runners flocked to Moscow’s Luzhniki Olympic Complex on Sunday for the city’s seventh annual color run. During the 5-kilometer dash, runners doused themselves and each other with brightly colored powder as they flew by. Here’s a look at the…

  • Ramadan Where the Sun Never Sleeps: Fasting in St. Petersburg

    Ramadan Where the Sun Never Sleeps: Fasting in St. Petersburg

    For most Muslims in the world, the month of Ramadan requires abstaining from all food and drink for around 12 consecutive hours, between sunrise and sunset. But what about for those Muslims who live in Russia’s northern city of St. Petersburg, where the sun dips below the horizon at 10:00 pm and already rises at…

  • The Quiet Epic Journey of ‘Maybe Esther’

    The Quiet Epic Journey of ‘Maybe Esther’

    Katja Petrowskaja has us mesmerized from the first page of her book, “Maybe Esther.” We have no hesitation leaping on the Berlin – Warsaw train with her on a voyage of discovery across Eastern Europe, back in time, and into the very concept of memory.  Much of “Maybe Esther’s” immediate appeal is the ease with…

  • Photographer Captures Everyday Russia

    Photographer Captures Everyday Russia

    Dmitry Markov is a Russian photographer who has been capturing images of everyday life in his home country since 2005.  He has also worked as a volunteer in an orphanage and as an assistant tutor at a charitable organization that works with people with disabilities. Today, Markov is based in Pskov, a western Russian city…

  • ‘A Corner of Heaven’ in Moscow: Krutitskoe Podvorye

    ‘A Corner of Heaven’ in Moscow: Krutitskoe Podvorye

    This medieval church residence is a window into the distant past and an island of peace in a bustling metropolis. May 31, 2019 – 15:03 According to legend, Krutitskoe Podvorye was founded in 1261, when the Muscovy lands were under the rule of the Golden Horde. Initially, the residence was a monastery. It then became…

  • Musical Moscow: A Summer of Festivals

    Musical Moscow: A Summer of Festivals

    In 2013, Moscow suddenly became a major festival hub. Every year there seem to be more festivals in more places — from rooftops to riverboats — with foreign and local musicians performing music of all kinds, from mellow jazz to good ole rock ‘n roll. If you live in Moscow, this might be a good…

  • Russians Stand Side by Side at LGBT Festival

    Russians Stand Side by Side at LGBT Festival

    Last week, the annual Side by Side (Bok o Bok in Russian) LGBT International Film Festival was held in Moscow. Amid screenings of films, gatherings within the community and providing a safe space for the LGBT community, the presence of anti-LGBT protestors and bomb threats tainted an otherwise peaceful event in the capital. “The first festival…

  • Russians Stand Side by Side at LGBT Film Festival

    Russians Stand Side by Side at LGBT Film Festival

    Last week, the annual Side by Side (Bok o Bok in Russian) LGBT International Film Festival was held in Moscow. Amid screenings of films, gatherings within the community and providing a safe space for the LGBT community, the presence of anti-LGBT protestors and bomb threats tainted an otherwise peaceful event in the capital. “The first festival…

  • Happy Birthday, St. Petersburg

    Happy Birthday, St. Petersburg

    Despite an unrelenting downpour and cool temperatures, St. Petersburg marked its 316th birthday last weekend with plenty of pomp and splendor, as befitting the Venice of the North. Celebrations kicked off on Saturday with an ice cream festival and retro transport parade consisting of more than 200 buses, trams and trucks from private collections, museums…

  • Kokoshnik: Not Just For Fairy Tales

    Kokoshnik: Not Just For Fairy Tales

    Pick up a book of Russian fairy tales, and you’ll notice something very distinctive in the costume of the female characters.  Spend Christmas in Russia, and you’ll see the same distinctive circlet on the head of every incarnation of Snegurochka – the Snow Maiden. We refer, of course, to that most iconic Russian headdress: the…

  • Bike Riding in Moscow: Not For the Faint-Hearted

    Bike Riding in Moscow: Not For the Faint-Hearted

    This year, the annual bike parade advocating for better conditions for bike riders in Moscow was not allowed by the authorities. Instead, the city government organized a festival that was more of a party than a demonstration for bike rights. We took a ride with Valery Larionov, a bike activist, to see how safe and…

  • On This Day: Alexander Solzhenitsyn

    On This Day: Alexander Solzhenitsyn

    Alexander Solzhenitsyn was born in the southern Russian city of Kislovodsk in 1918. He studied both mathematics and philosophy, literature and history before serving in the Great Patriotic War (the Soviet part of World War II) as an officer, later decorated for personal heroism. But despite his record, his criticism of Josef Stalin’s conduct of…

  • ‘To See Paris and Die: The Soviet Lives of Western Culture’

    ‘To See Paris and Die: The Soviet Lives of Western Culture’

    Eleonory Gilburd’s “To See Paris and Die: The Soviet Lives of Western Culture,” one of the six books nominated for this year’s Pushkin House Book Prize, takes a radically new look at the Thaw, a period of relative cultural freedom that dates roughly from the death of Josef Stalin in 1953 until the Soviet invasion…

  • Dagestan’s Last Tightrope Walkers: A Photo Essay

    Dagestan’s Last Tightrope Walkers: A Photo Essay

    Dagestan, a mountainous republic in Russia’s North Caucasus, has long been known for its tradition of tightrope walking. Now the preserve of a few devoted practitioners, it is said that the practice was originally born out of the need for mountain peoples to commute between different auls, or villages. As legend goes, locals simply strung…

  • On This Day: Mikhail Sholokhov

    On This Day: Mikhail Sholokhov

    Born on May 24,1905, Mikhail Sholokhov was a Russian writer and winner of the 1965 Nobel Prize for Literature for his massive work on the Cossacks of southern Russia, “And Quiet Flows the Don.” After joining the Red Army at the early age of 15, Sholokhov returned from Moscow in 1925 to his home: a…

  • Dreams, Death and Beyond at Zverev Center of Modern Art

    Dreams, Death and Beyond at Zverev Center of Modern Art

    Dreams, death, the subconscious, the gap between what’s alive and what isn’t. These are some of the themes explored in subCONSCIOUS, an exhibition of art by five Moscow artists working with paint, photography, poetry, video and illustration. In different media, Ilmira Bolotyan, Polina Gisich, Liza Neklessa, Saida Sattarova and Jane (Zhenya) Sharvina all ask questions…

  • Okroshka: Summer’s Simple Pleasure

    Okroshka: Summer’s Simple Pleasure

    Late spring and early summer are all about change and transition. Glass windows are swapped out for screens, kids flee school for summer holidays, and wool sweaters and coats take their annual trip to the dry cleaner. In Russia, for many the summer months mean the slower, simpler life of the dacha, where there are…

  • 10 Artists Who Were Victims of Repressions, Remembered in Street Art

    10 Artists Who Were Victims of Repressions, Remembered in Street Art

    Nikolai Gumilyov. Vsevolod Meyerhold. Boris Pilnyak. Osip Mandelstam. Alexander Vvedensky. Pavel Florensky. Gustav Shpet. Nikolai Klyuev. Mikhail Koltsov. Daniil Kharms. All famous Russian artists who fell victim to repressions in the Soviet gulag between the 1920s and the 1940s. As part of a new exhibition by the Russian street artist Zoom, portraits of the 10…

  • On This Day: Andrei Sakharov

    On This Day: Andrei Sakharov

    Andrei Sakharov was a nuclear physicist and an outspoken activist for disarmament, peace and human rights in the Soviet Union. He was persecuted for his views on civil liberties and reform, but it was these efforts that earned him the Nobel Peace Prize in 1975. Today, the Sakharov Prize is awarded by the European Parliament…

  • Game of Thrones Finale Sets Moscow Stadium Ablaze

    Game of Thrones Finale Sets Moscow Stadium Ablaze

    A series that has brought fans on a journey of tears, shock, horror, joy and suspense over the span of its eight seasons, HBO’s hit series “Game of Thrones” came to an end with this week’s much-anticipated season finale. In Moscow, fan frenzy over the Song of Ice and Fire was in full force at…

  • Russian History Enthusiasts Re-Enact Battle of Borodino

    Russian History Enthusiasts Re-Enact Battle of Borodino

    On Sunday, May 19, Russia’s Patriotic Education Center in Moscow organized a historical re-enactment of the final part of the Battle of Borodino, which was fought in 1812 during the French invasion of Russia. With at least 70,000 casualties, Borodino marked the deadliest day of the Napoleonic Wars. This historic battle has appeared in many…

  • Spring Bike Festival Races Through Moscow

    Spring Bike Festival Races Through Moscow

    You know it’s spring when Moscow closes its busiest streets and lets outdoor activities take over. Last weekend saw a rare trio: a half marathon, a cross-country race and an epic bike festival that gathered cyclists in the tens of thousands. Here’s a look at central Moscow during the festival:

  • The Mixed Feelings of Moscow’s Venezuela Community About Life Abroad

    The Mixed Feelings of Moscow’s Venezuela Community About Life Abroad

    According to the United Nations, more than 3.4 million people have fled Venezuela to live abroad in the wake of the country’s political and economic crisis. Some of them are living in Russia —which openly supports the government of Nicolas Maduro. We decided to ask the Venezuelan community in Moscow what they think about what’s happening in their…

  • The Heroic Bitter Land of ‘Chernobyl’

    The Heroic Bitter Land of ‘Chernobyl’

    “Chernobyl” is not an easy show to watch. Nor should it be. The 1986 explosion at Chernobyl in present-day Ukraine was the worst nuclear accident to date, which killed hundreds of thousands and still affects millions more. But HBO’s five-part miniseries is hard to watch for reasons beyond those harrowing facts and graphic images of…

  • Self-Help Lessons From the Russian Classics

    Self-Help Lessons From the Russian Classics

    Writer and comedian Viv Groskop has faced many rooms full of strangers expecting to be amused in her career as a stand-up. But what really scared her in the run-up to the publication of her latest book were the Russians. “I was terrified they would be offended,” Groskop said. She needn’t have worried. Part memoir,…

  • Russia’s Arctic Basks in the Snow for Summer ’19

    Russia’s Arctic Basks in the Snow for Summer ’19

    In Moscow, residents are enjoying the start of a breezy summer with increasingly warm temperatures and picnics in the park. Nearly 2,900 kilometers northwest, residents of Norilsk — an industrial city above the Arctic Circle — are not quite as lucky. However, they’re not letting the lack of warm temperatures stop them from some serious summer…

  • Night in the Museum, Day in the Hotel

    Night in the Museum, Day in the Hotel

    Moscow is celebrating this year’s Night in the Museum with a record 356 events at 200 venues  — and keeping the doors open until 6 a.m. The theme is “Live in the Museum” with events designed to let you study, listen, experience, see, create and stroll in some of the city’s best, biggest, smallest and…

  • How to Spend A Night in a St. Petersburg Museum

    How to Spend A Night in a St. Petersburg Museum

    On May 18, International Museum Day, most museums, art galleries, and churches in St. Petersburg will be open to the public from 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. and can be visited with a single ticket. Tickets — at the very reasonable price of 400 rubles — can be purchased all street theater kiosks. Events are…

  • Russia Makes It to Eurovision Song Contest Final

    Russia Makes It to Eurovision Song Contest Final

    It’s Eurovision Song Contest time again, and Russia’s Sergei Lazarev has made it to Saturday’s final with a horror-themed ballad.   The annual celebration of kitsch — which is more famous for its over-the-top staging and shameless political voting than the quality of the music — takes place in Israel this year, and the guest…

  • Discover Nikolai Meshcherin

    Discover Nikolai Meshcherin

    The private Museum of Russian Impressionism was founded less than five years ago, but it has already become an important part of the Moscow art and museum scene. Its significance is not only thanks to its architecturally stunning venue — a reconstructed sugar silo at what was once a confectionary factory — and its central…

  • Russia’s Largest Rivers From the Amur to the Volga

    Russia’s Largest Rivers From the Amur to the Volga

    From May 15 through June 15, Russia holds the United Days of Protection of Small Rivers and Ponds. This movement involves more than 100 environmental organizations throughout Russia, and aims to celebrate the smaller of Russia’s waters. While the country gets set cleaning, assessing, developing and restoring these small rivers and ponds, here’s a look…

  • On This Day: Mikhail Bulgakov

    On This Day: Mikhail Bulgakov

    On this day in 1891, Mikhail Bulgakov was born in Kiev – then part of the Russian empire, now the capital of Ukraine. Today a household name in Russian literature, Bulgakov’s best and most known work was published after his death in 1940. One of seven children, Bulgakov’s father was a prominent professor and a…

  • Contest: Two Free Tickets to Romen

    Contest: Two Free Tickets to Romen

    If all you know about Romani music came from listening to a couple of singers at a Mediterranean resort jiggling lots of fake gold and stamping their feet — who were, by the way, a Spanish-French-German couple from Des Moines — then you don’t know anything about Romani music. And if you think all Romani…

  • Celebrating Rock Star Zemfira, 20 Years After Her Explosive Debut Album

    Celebrating Rock Star Zemfira, 20 Years After Her Explosive Debut Album

    Legendary Russian rock singer Zemfira released her debut album in May 1999. The young musician quickly attained cult status and became one of the most popular artists in the country and a symbol of the era. Twenty years later, many still adore the musician.

  • FC Zenit St. Petersburg Crowned Russian Champions, in Pictures

    FC Zenit St. Petersburg Crowned Russian Champions, in Pictures

    Already secure at the top of the Russian Premier League table, FC Zenit St. Petersburg were officially crowned 2018-2019 champions on Sunday night after a convincing 3-1 home win against PFC CSKA Moscow at the packed Gazrom Arena. Zenit’s win was met with wild celebrations within the stadium and beyond after a 4-year title draught.…

  • Sergei Dorenko Dead at 59

    Sergei Dorenko Dead at 59

    Sergei Dorenko died on May 9 in Moscow. According to multiple media reports, he was riding his motorcycle not far from the city center when he had a heart attack, drove into the oncoming traffic lane and then slid to a stop. No other vehicles were involved in the accident, and he apparently died on the…

  • Moscow’s Russian Romani Theater

    Moscow’s Russian Romani Theater

    When in Moscow, see what is unique to Moscow. That is the credo that sends tourists and expats to the Kremlin, St. Basil’s Cathedral, and even Bunker 42. It should also send everyone to the Romen Theater, the only dramatic and musical repertory theater in the world created by, run by, and dedicated to the…

  • St. Petersburg’s Scars of War

    St. Petersburg’s Scars of War

    May 9 represents one of the biggest celebrations in Russia, but also the commemoration of the end of one of the darkest chapters in the history of the country. Although victorious in what Russians call the Great Patriotic War (their part of World War II), the Soviet Union lost over 27 million people. Leningrad paid…

  • On This Day: Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky

    On This Day: Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky

    Born on May 7, 1840, Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky became the first Russian composer to break through into the international market with a lasting impact on music all over the world. Today he remains the most popular Russian composer of all time. Tchaikovsky was born in a small town in Vyatka Governorate (now Udmurtia) to a…

  • Moscow Kicks Off Fountain Season

    Moscow Kicks Off Fountain Season

    More than 500 working fountains are located across Moscow. Once used as sources of drinking water, they can be found anywhere from the city’s most photographed sightseeing spots to its quiet courtyards. Moscow city authorities traditionally open these fountains right before the start of warm weather in May. As a result, Muscovites see the launch…

  • Mark Galeotti: ‘The Vory: Russia’s Super Mafia’

    Mark Galeotti: ‘The Vory: Russia’s Super Mafia’

    In “The Vory: Russia’s Super Mafia,” Mark Galeotti draws on years of research to tell the grimly absorbing tale of Russia’s criminal underworld. Galeotti is a specialist in Russian history, security and crime who is a senior researcher at the Institute of International Relations (Prague); a regular contributor to international news outlets, and advisor to…

  • On This Day: Catherine the Great

    On This Day: Catherine the Great

    On May 2, 1729, the woman who would become Catherine the Great was born as Princess Sophie of Anhalt-Zerbst in Stettin, Prussia (now known as  Szczecin, Poland) to a German family. After a largely uneventful childhood, at the age of 16 she married Karl Ulrich. Karl Ulrich was the only son of Charles Frederick, Duke…

  • On This Day: In 1918 Soviet Russia Celebrated May 1

    On This Day: In 1918 Soviet Russia Celebrated May 1

    On this day in in 1918, the Soviet government marked May 1 as Day of International Solidarity with Workers. Its origins date back to Australia in 1856, when workers demonstrated for an 8-hour work day. This demand was picked up by anarchist organizations in the U.S. on May 1 in 1886. Demonstrations and marches in…

  • Restoring Repin: Criminal Sentenced As Work Continues

    Restoring Repin: Criminal Sentenced As Work Continues

    In May 2018, disaster struck in the Tretyakov Gallery. On a Friday evening just before closing time, a man ran into the almost empty hall of works by Ilya Repin, picked up a metal stanchion and bashed the glass-enclosed painting, “Ivan the Terrible and His Son Ivan November 16, 1581.” The assailant broke through the…

  • On This Day: Nicholas II Signs Decree for “Tolerance Development”

    On This Day: Nicholas II Signs Decree for “Tolerance Development”

    On April 30, 1905, Emperor Nicholas II issued a decree on “Tolerance Development.” It would be the first in a series meant to reform relations between Russia’s church and state. This Edict of Toleration — a declaration made by a ruler or government that protects practitioners of a religion from persecution — gave the religions…

  • Stefan Ingvarsson’s Cultural Exchange

    Stefan Ingvarsson’s Cultural Exchange

    When Stefan Ingvarsson arrived in Moscow in 2015 as the new Cultural Counsellor the Embassy of Sweden, he already had spent a lot of time in the Soviet Union and Russia, starting with high school exchanges in the 1980s. He also had a great deal of experience organizing cultural events and festivals, coming to Russia…