nO. 2 (1743) санкт-петербург-таймс In the Name of Jesus w w w. s pt i m e s. ru wed n es day, ja n ua ry 2 3 , 2013 alexander belenky / spt A man climbs out of the water from a hole cut into the ice in the shape of a cross in the village of Tyarlevo in the Pavlovsk Park on Saturday night. The temperature was minus 20 degrees Celsius. Russians across the country take the plunge every year to celebrate the Orthodox holiday of Epiphany. arts & culture Catching Up With Pussy Riot Freed group member Yekaterina Samutsevich talks about the past year and what the future holds for Pussy Riot. Page 7. local news Hospital Plans Cause Outcry Children’s hospital may be moved for judges. Page 2. Please contact us at 997 1257 www.atlanticschool.ru LocalNews Wednesday, January 23, 2013 ❖ 2 City Duma Rejects Call For Ban on Assemblies By Sergey Chernov T he S t. P etersburg T imes alexander belenky / spt The department of presidential affairs wants City Hospital No. 31 (above) to give up its premises to the court judges. Hospital Plans Cause Outrage By Irina Titova T H E S T. P E T E R S B U R G T I M E S More than 85,000 people have already signed a petition addressed to President Vladimir Putin to defend St. Petersburg’s City Hospital No. 31, which is under threat of relocation. The hospital, one of the city’s most successful clinics in the treatment of child cancer, is currently in danger of being designated as a medical center for the judges of the country’s federal Arbitration and Supreme Courts, which are due to move to the city from Moscow during the next few years. The list of those who have signed the petition includes not only medical personnel at the hospital and the desperate parents of young cancer patients, but also well-known figures from the worlds of art and science, as well as ordinary Russian citizens. The list included Zhores Alfyorov, winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics; actors Oleg Basilashvili, Liya Akhedzhakova and Yelizaveta Boyarskaya; actress and children’s charity leader Chulpan Khamatova, international award-winning film director Alexander Sokurov; musician Andrei Makarevich; writers Daniil Granin and Lev Lurye and other prominent figures. The petition has attracted numerous supporters on Facebook and other social networks through the website of www.change.org, with many also leaving heartbreaking comments. Maria Sautkina, the mother of one of the hospital’s patients, said the clinic “had the best doctors and equipment, which have saved the life of my child.” “Only here can my son have annual examinations to prevent the return of his illness,” Sautkina said. Irina Stelmakhova, another supporter of the petition, said there could be “no objective reason to stop the work of the hospital, which is of vital importance for sick children.” “The people who are making the decision should realize that the dissolution of the hospital may turn out to be a death sentence for some kids. Sirs, you are not beasts, are you?” Stelmakhova wrote in her comment. The city’s main oncologist Yury Punanov also disagreed with the idea of moving the hospital. Punanov has written an official statement saying that the hospital should stay on its own premises, Fontanka.ru news website reported. The Russian Orthodox Church also spoke up in defense of the hospital. Vladimir Legoida, head of the Synod’s information department, said that although the purpose of providing medical help to the judges was “understandable,” for “they like all other people need medical service,” the “treatment of one [group of] people can’t be done at the expense of other people — especially when we are speaking about children. Our future depends on how we treat children today,” Legoida said on the church’s website Patriarchia.ru, adding that in any society it is difficult to find any other more simple and clear moral priority than the interests of a sick child. “I believe the community of judges in Russia, which has many worthy people, will consider it morally unacceptable to get medical help if there is the tiniest threat that because of it, children with cancer may suffer,” Legoida said. On Jan. 20, about 300 people gathered in front of the hospital to demand the resignation of St. Petersburg Deputy Governor Olga Kazanskaya, deputy governor for social issues, and to request the cancelation of the courts’ planned move to St. Petersburg. More meetings in support of the hospital were held in the city last week. In November, President Vladimir Putin approved a proposal to move the Supreme Court and the Supreme Arbitration Court from Moscow to St. Petersburg at a cost of more than 50 billion rubles ($1.5 billion). The process could take between 24 and 30 months, a senior official said at the time. In December, a working group aimed at facilitating the move of the courts from Moscow to St. Petersburg made the decision to set up medical facilities for the judges in City Hospital No. 31. Vladimir Kozhin, head of the department of presidential affairs, ordered the city authorities and the country’s Health Ministry to move the hospital’s personnel and equipment to another hospital. No alternative options were suggested in the protocol. The final decision on which medical center will be chosen to provide medical assistance to the judges is to be announced in February, Interfax reported, referring to Valery Kolabutin, head of St. Petersburg Health Committee. Kolabutin said the idea of setting up a medical center for judges in City Hospital No. 31 was suggested as one of the possible options, adding that the relocation of only a part of the hospital’s department would cost about 350 to 400 million rubles ($11.6-$13.2 million). The move would take two or three years, he said. Yelena Grachyova, coordinator of the charity foundation AdVita, which helps children and adults suffering from cancer, said there were only two ways to resolve the problem: “Either to leave the hospital alone or first build a brand new complex for it and only then allow the clinic for judges to move in.” The hospital, located in a quiet area of the city’s prestigious Krestovsky Island district, has a unique child and adult oncohematology department, as well as departments for bone-marrow transplants, cardiology and kidney transplants. The hospital provides the combined services of chemotherapists, surgeons and emergency physicians, and has a center for radiation therapy nearby, which is convenient for sick children, as it saves them from having to put their health at risk by traveling around the city in order to have the treatment, Grachyova was cited by MedPortal.ru as saying. Grachyova said moving the hospital had “neither economic, nor medical, nor ethical grounds.” “Until at least one reason for the move is given, the matter should not even be discussed,” she was quoted by Interfax as saying. On Jan. 16, a group of deputies from the St. Petersburg Legislative Assembly sent a repeat request to City Governor Georgy Poltavchenko enquiring about the future of the hospital. Poltavchenko answered that “Hospital No. 31 is being considered as one of the options for the location of the medical department to serve the upper court bodies in future.” He added, however, that “no action was being taken on moving the hospital at the moment.” “Such action will begin only after a final, balanced decision that does not discriminate [against] anyone’s interests has been made. All the discussions that are being held now can be called speculative,” Poltavchenko said in his answer, RIA Novosti reported. On Wednesday, Jan. 23, supporters of the hospital will gather on the city’s Field of Mars at 6 p.m. for another rally that has been approved by the city administration. One-man pickets, which need no authorization from City Hall, are being held in support of the hospital every day through Jan. 25 from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. near the Ploshchad Vosstaniya, Gostiny Dvor, Admiralteiskaya and Nevsky Prospekt metro stations, the authors of the petition said. Points for gathering signatures have also been set up in several places. In a surprise move, the St. Petersburg Legislative Assembly last week refused to consider a controversial bill on amendments to the law on public assemblies that would effectively ban any protests in most of the city, including bedroom communities. Backed by City Hall and proKremlin party deputies, the proposed law would ban public assemblies on Palace Square, St. Isaac’s Square and Nevsky Prospekt. Rallies would also be banned within 200 meters from state administration buildings, state educational and health institutions, railway stations and platforms, bus and boat stations and airports, as well as within 100 meters from metro stations and adjacent territory. The bill on assemblies was drawn up by United Russia deputy Vitaly Milonov and submitted to the Legislative Assembly by City Governor Georgy Poltavchenko. The assembly’s refusal to consider the bill caused a stir in the local media, because previously any bills proposed or supported by the authorities — including Milonov’s infamous “gay propaganda” ban — had all been passed by the Legislative Assembly indivertibly. The Yabloko Democratic Party, A Just Russia and Communist Party deputies voted against the inclusion of the bill on the assembly’s agenda, while pro-Kremlin parties United Russia and the Liberal Democratic Party (LDPR) backed it, with the exception of two deputies. Alexander Kobrinsky, a Yabloko deputy and member of the Legislative Assembly’s Legislation Committee, believes that the authorities will attempt to push the amendments through again at a future session. “But we made it quite clear that we don’t want to adopt it in its current form,” Kobrinsky said Tuesday. “We received unexpected support from two members of the ruling coalition — United Russia and the LDPR — who realize that they will have to answer to their voters, because this law would drastically worsen things for citizens. They won’t even be able to gather to discuss problems of their district or courtyard, and I hope that the governor has enough common sense not to submit it in such a form again.” I N Kobrinsky said that no march or rally would be possible in the city if the law is adopted. “We’ll be left with nothing more than one-man pickets; you’ll be allowed to stand with a poster, and that’s all,” he said. However, the lack of a new, harsher law did not prevent the authorities from refusing to authorize rallies or close down public assemblies. The attempt to introduce the bill was taken soon after the police dispersed a group of teenagers who gathered for a snowball fight on the Field of Mars, arresting two for taking part in an “unauthorized assembly.” Called “Snow Battle” and held annually, the snowball fight was organized via social networking sites and drew several dozen to the open space on Jan. 7. A video of the incident shows a police officer speaking into a megaphone to warn the teenagers that they are “committing mass presence and mass movement of citizens, qualified as a violation of public order.” The teenagers, some of who were holding snowballs, reacted with surprise and giggles. Two 18-year-olds, Andrei Veselov and Valery Okunev, were detained and face hefty fines. Their cases are reportedly due to be heard in court later this month. The right of freedom of assembly is the focus of Strategy 31, a campaign of peaceful gatherings in defense of this constitutional right held regularly across Russia, including in St. Petersburg. The most recent local Strategy 31 rally held near Gostiny Dvor metro on Nevsky Prospekt on Dec. 31 was broken up as soon as protesters raised a banner reading “Freedom of Assembly; Always and Everywhere.” Nine activists were arrested and after being held for up to two nights in a police precinct, most of them were fined from 10,000 to 20,000 rubles ($330-$660) for participating in an unauthorized rally and 500 to 1,000 rubles ($17-$33) for alleged failure to obey a police officer’s orders. The demonstrators said they were acting in defense of the constitution, as arrests and refusals to authorize rallies violate both the constitution and the European Convention on Human Rights, which is ratified by the Russian Federation. B R I E F Yabloko Seeks Growth Illegal Landfill Found ■ ST. PETERSBURG (SPT) — Fortyfour people have annulled their membership of the St. Petersburg branch of the Yabloko Democratic Party, Interfax reported, citing information from former Yabloko member Vitaly Shtager. The news agency did not say during what period of time the annulments had taken place. In the middle of January, Shtager announced that he had left the party along with 11 other people. The group of former Yabloko members also suggested that other members unhappy with the party’s current situation should also consider leaving. Grigory Yavlinsky, head of the party in the St. Petersburg Legislative Assembly, said that Yabloko could soon see a potential increase of 150 percent — more than 600 people — in membership in the city as new members join the party. According to the latest statistics, the St. Petersburg branch of Yabloko consists of 400 members. ■ ST. PETERSBURG (SPT) — A large illegal landfill site has been discovered near the construction site of the General Motors plant in the village of Shushary to the south of the city, Interfax reported, citing the city police. Construction waste had been taken to the landfill using heavy vehicles, and the city police have already detained several dozen trucks involved in the dumping, the news agency reported. The vehicles used had come from the nearby GM construction site, Fontanka.ru reported. A criminal case into violation of the rules for the treatment of ecologically dangerous substances and waste has been launched. GM launched its plant in St. Petersburg in 2008. It produces models including the Chevrolet Cruze and Opel Astra. By 2015, GM plans to expand the capacity of the plant to 230,000 cars a year. The current capacity is 98,000 cars a year. NationalNews Wednesday, January 23, 2013 ❖ 3 Netherlands Implicated In Suicide of Russian Activist By Nikolaus von Twickel T H E S T. P E T E R S B U RG T I M E S MOSCOW — Friends and lawyers over the weekend accused the Netherlands of complicity in the suicide of opposition activist Alexander Dolmatov in a Dutch extradition center. Dolmatov, a member of radical writer Eduard Limonov’s Other Russia movement, was found dead in his cell early Thursday in an extradition center in the port city of Rotterdam. He had fled to the Netherlands last summer to seek political asylum after being sought by police in connection with the violence during a May 6 protest against President Vladimir Putin’s inauguration. His lawyer Yevgeny Arkhipov accused Dutch authorities of grave rights violations. He explained in a telephone interview Sunday that Dolmatov had been sent to the extradition center even though he had appealed an earlier decision to deny him asylum. Also, he said, authorities had notified nobody about two earlier attempts by his client to kill himself. “He has become the victim of good relations with Russia,” Arkhipov said. He added that Dutch authorities had not told him any details about the circumstances of the suicide. National media reports suggested that Dolmatov had cut his wrists. Arkhipov confirmed that Dolmatov had been denied asylum in mid-December. The complaint was filed together with a Dutch lawyer, Marq Wijngaarden, on Jan. 11. Wijngaarden told Gazeta.ru that the authorities had no right to send him to the extradition center. Dutch officials insisted that the reason for the suicide was personal. They based their statement on a letter that they say was found with Dolmatov’s body. “This letter is evidence that he killed himself not because of his asylum case,” said Onno Elderenbosch, deputy head of the Dutch Embassy in Moscow. Elderenbosch added that the letter was addressed to Dolmatov’s mother and that its contents would not be made public because it was personal. However, national media published the letter over the weekend. The handwritten note to his mother begins with the words, “Mom, I am leaving so I do not return a traitor and disgrace us all.” Arkhipov said the letter clearly showed that Dolmatov killed himself because of his asylum case. “Obviously, he wrote it under severe pressure,” he said. He dismissed media reports that suggested Dutch authorities had pressured Dolmatov to disclose military secrets. Dolmatov had worked as a constructor in a rocket factory near Moscow. Dolmatov told The St. Petersburg Times in an interview in July that he had not had access to top-secret information. Arkhipov did, however, say that Russian special services had pressured his client. “He had told me that he got threatening phone calls from the Federal Security Service,” he said. Denis Solopov, a friend of Dolmatov who lives in the Netherlands, echoed Arkhipov’s comments. “One hundred percent, the suicide was not a personal thing,” he said by telephone from Amsterdam. He said he and family members had been unable to contact Dolmatov since December, when he stopped answering his cell phone. “He simply vanished,” Solopov said, suggesting that Dolmatov had suffered from depression. The Dutch Justice Ministry, which oversees refugee affairs, said in an email Friday that Minister Ivo Opstelten would order an investigation into the circumstances of the death. Dolmatov said in the interview in July that he feared that he would be punished disproportionately because he had worked in a high-security rocket factory. A laser engineer who worked in production allocation, Dolmatov said he was fired from the factory in Korolyov in May because of his political activities. He hoped to follow the example of Solopov, an environmental activist, who received refugee status in the Netherlands in 2011 for being prosecuted for a 2010 attack on an administration building in the Moscow suburb of Khimki. Solopov told The St. Petersburg Times that he knows at least three other opposition activists who have applied for asylum in the Netherlands after being targeted by investigators for the May 6 protests. Their cases are pending, he said. denis grishkin / vedomosti Russia’s demographic problems mean that it is vital to attract more immigrants in order to bolster the country’s workforce. FMS Backs More Immigration By Nikolaus von Twickel T H E S T. P E T E R S B U R G T I M E S MOSCOW — Russia urgently needs to attract immigrants over the coming years to avoid labor shortages, the country’s top migration officer said Monday. “Even if we manage to stabilize or increase the population by raising the birth rate, the only source for increasing the labor force for the coming 15 to 20 years will be migration,” Federal Migration Service head Konstantin Romodanovsky told Interfax in an interview. Romodanovsky said that the Kremlin had ordered him to keep migration stable at about 300,000 people per year and that this number should include ethnic Russians from abroad, highly qualified foreign specialists and promising youths. The figure of 300,000 immigrants was formulated by Vladimir Putin in a programmatic newspaper article in his presidential campaign one year ago. Critics have voiced serious doubts about its feasibility, arguing that the government’s past attempts to lure Russian speakers and qualified migrants to the country have seen little success. Romodanovsky warned that according to official data, the country’s population is expected to fall from the current 143 million to 139.3 million by 2030. “It is problematic to refuse to attract foreign workers and to focus exclusively on your own labor resources when those are strongly declining,” he said. However, the migration chief said he supports recent bills intended to tighten sanctions against illegal migrants. “They don’t pay taxes, they live in shacks, hang around on the streets. … It is time to put an end to this,” he was quoted as saying. Romodanovsky suggested that a large share of the 3 million Uzbeks and Tajiks working in the country are illegals. A law Putin signed on Dec. 30 introduced criminal charges and drastically increases fines for violations of registration rules. National media have described the law as directed against “elastic apartments,” fake addresses at which hundreds and even thousands of migrant workers are registered. Critics have called the law a populist gesture that will bolster anti-immigration sentiment in the country. Russian law stipulates that foreigners inform the migration service of their whereabouts when they stay longer than seven working days in the country. According to rules reinstated in 2011, this can also be a company address for foreign employees. The law also requires Russian citizens to register any given home address three months after they move there. Experts said that while recent reforms have greatly eased the country’s registration system, illegal registration documents are still widespread, especially because many employers require local registration as a hiring requirement. “What might be easy on paper is often cumbersome in practice,” said Pavel Chikov, head of the Agora human rights organization. He pointed out that the rules stipulate a landlord’s consent and sometimes require the landlord to be present for the registration process, which typically involves standing in long lines. Chikov predicted that the stricter rules would only increase corruption. “Higher fines will mean higher bribes,” he said. NTV Documentary Alleges Campaign Against Church Diva’s Voice By Jonathan Earle T H E S T. P E T E R S B U R G T I M E S MOSCOW — State-controlled NTV television Sunday aired its latest documentary-style film targeting prominent opposition figures, this time for allegedly being part of an organized information campaign to discredit the Russian Orthodox Church. The film, “I Don’t Believe It,” accuses popular blogger Rustam Adagamov — a member of the opposition Coordination Council — TV hosts Leonid Parfyonov and Vladimir Pozner, and others of links to an anti- clerical campaign partly run out of Ukraine. Ukrainian feminist group Femen, known for staging topless protests, and the punk band Pussy Riot are portrayed as among the most infamous manifestations of the campaign. Other participants in the effort, primarily bloggers and journalists, receive payouts in exchange for negative coverage of the church, the program alleges, and others come across as repulsive people. Adagamov, for example, is said to be willing to accept 150,000 rubles ($5,000) for a blog post, and the show repeats allegations recently made by his ex-wife that he is a pedophile. The blogger responded by saying that he was proud to be grouped with Pozner and controversial curator Marat Gelman, and criticized NTV for failing to mention his pro-Church activities. “Where’s the part about how I used my blog to help Father Vladislav from Belgorod, who had adopted an orphan, raise money for a new house?” Adagamov wrote on his Facebook page, adding that the film was a “piece of crap.” Parfyonov, a former host on NTV, directed his anger at filmmaker Boris Korchenikov, a journalist and actor best known for his role in “Kadety,” a television drama about military cadets. “What is this shoddy, pompous heap of nonsense? Do you think Orthodox patriotism atones for the sin of wretched journalism?” Parfyonov wrote on his Live Journal blog. Church spokesman Vsevolod Chaplin defended the film, saying it accurately reflected the general public’s mood, not including certain urban “cliques,” RIA-Novosti reported. Endangered Bison Overdosed on Speed, Says Forensic Study T H E S T. P E T E R S B U R G T I M E S MOSCOW — A European bison, whose sudden death at a Moscow region nature reserve earlier this month sparked outrage among conservationists, died not of food poisoning, but of an overdose of speed, according to a forensic study, RIA-Novosti reported. The bizarre death of Shponti, a mating bull imported from Germany to boost Russia’s breeding program, was initially chalked up to rotten fruits.But an independent study revealed that the 1,300 kilogram animal had elevated levels of amphetamines in his kidneys, enough to cause cardiac arrest. It was not immediately clear how Shponti could have ingested the powerful drug. The Priosko-Terrasny reserve has been at the center of efforts to save the European bison since Soviet times, but has been scandalized in recent years by apparently open warfare between employees and the park’s management. An earlier statement on the reserve’s website, which appeared to have been written by disgruntled employees, said KaMaZ trucks dumped several crates of rotten mandarins and tomatoes in the bison enclosure sometime before the New Year. The state- ment laid the blame for Shponti’s death squarely on the park’s director. Three bison have died at the reserve in murky circumstances in recent months. A female bison, Madonna, perished on Jan. 7, the same day as Shponti, and an eight-year-old breeding bull named Multon was euthanized in October after he apparently broke his jaw. The results of an official inquiry into the deaths are expected in February. Is ‘Too High’ T H E S T. P E T E R S B U RG T I M E S MOSCOW — One of the hardest things for an opera reviewer to do is to describe the lead singer’s voice. The reviewer could list off notes or compare the voice to that of a bird. Polish soprano Katarzyna Dondalska reached a new milestone that reviewers can use to quantify her singing capacity. Her voice reaches high enough to damage the loudspeakers in Moscow’s metro. Dondalska will be in Moscow on Jan. 25 to perform with the Morphing Vienna Chamber Orchestra at the Viennesse Strauss Gala 2013. The concert’s organizers wanted to submit ads to play while people are riding the metro’s escalators, but some of the notes turned out to be too high and potentially damaging to the audio systems. In the end, the organizers had to choose another sound clip for the ad. The Vienna-based chamber orchestra is returning to the city for the second time with a number of classical compositions from the repertoires of renowned world composers, including Johann Strauss and Wolfgang Mozart. 4 ❖ Wednesday, January 23, 2013 N A T I O N A L n e w s The St. Petersburg Times Activists Urged to Become Elections Officials By Jonathan Earle T H E S T. P E T E R S B U R G T I M ES MOSCOW — A presidential election in Russia isn’t scheduled for another five years, but the people who will run the polling stations and count the ballots are already being selected. Regional elections officials have until April 30 to form more than 90,000 local elections commissions nationwide — one for every polling station — whose members will serve five-year terms under a new law that elections watchdogs said is designed to protect the ruling party. Given widespread allegations of fraud during State Duma elections in December 2011, often involving local elections officials, they say it is critical that independent activists committed to fair elections find their way onto local commissions. Even one honest commission member is enough to “jam the vote-rigging machine,” said Roman Udot, head of monitoring at Golos, a nongovernmental elections watchdog. Golos is one of several groups that have recruited thousands of volunteers to serve on the commissions, which have traditionally consisted of state employees and members of government-friendly civic groups handpicked for their loyalty, not for their democratic scruples, Udot said. The new recruits, energized by the past year’s pro-democracy movement, which the 2011 election scandal helped to spark, will be placed on commissions mainly via the Communist Party and A Just Russia, parliamentary parties with the right to one spot on each commission. As commission members, they’ll have access to voting documents as well as more clout than an observer, a significant number of whom said they were shooed away from polling stations during the Duma elections. They can also influence other commission members, refuse to certify election results and offer dissenting opinions that can be used to challenge vote tallies. Due to the new five-year rule, commissions chosen in the next few months will administer Duma elections in 2016, the presidential election in 2018, and gubernatorial and other local races. Close attention will likely be paid to city legislative and mayoral elections in Moscow, expected next year and in 2015, respectively, given the particularly fervent opposition activism in the capital. Georgy Alburov, of the opposition election-monitoring group Rosvybory, said he expects enough volunteers to cover every one of Moscow’s 3,400 voting stations. “Recruitment is going well,” he said. “It’s picking up as the late-January deadline approaches. People are waking up and are ready to register.” Alburov, a member of the opposition Coordination Council, is also a close ally of Kremlin foe Alexei Navalny. To dissuade newcomers, elections officials began accepting applications over the long winter holidays, when many Russians travel or relax, Alburov said. The window for applicants in the Samara region, for example, was from mid-December to mid-January, closing before Russians returned to work. Recruitment appears to be going less well outside Moscow and other major cities, with even major parties saying they likely won’t be able to cover many polling stations. The Communist Party will recruit enough people to cover only 75 percent of commissions nationwide and only 20 to 30 percent in regional centers and villages, said Vadim Solovyov, a senior alexandra astakhova / vedomosti Watchdogs say it’s vital that independent activists committed to fair elections find their way onto local commissions. party official, Kommersant reported last week. A Just Russia’s Mikhail Yemelyanov was more optimistic, telling the newspaper that his party will cover all local commissions, excluding those in several regions, including the North Caucasus. Incidentally, the ruling United Russia party’s overwhelming victory in several regions in the North Caucasus — it officially won more than 99 percent of the vote in Chechnya, for instance — raised eyebrows and sparked local protests. “People are afraid that the commission will be a lot of work, although in reality, commissions are only active just before elections,” Ilya Mishchenko, head of training at vote monitor Citizen Observer said, explaining the choice ofsome activists not to volunteer. More than 1 million people will be selected to serve on the commissions, whose average size is about 12 members, from a pool of nominees submitted by parties and local administrations. Dozens of political parties that registered in the wake of last year’s political reforms, which made it easier to create new parties, are not entitled to place representatives on the commissions. Video clips purportedly showing local elections officials committing infractions ranging from minor violations on tally sheets to outright vote-rigging, caused outrage during and after Duma elections in December 2011. A recent study by U.S. and Russian academics published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, a U.S. academic journal, concluded that United Russia’s official results in Moscow, 47 percent, were 11 percentage points higher than its actual haul. Ultimately, the stated goal of Golos, Rosvybory and other recruiters is to instill integrity in the electoral process. “For the time being, our task is to, at the very least, weaken the wave of falsifications, when people have become so unused to the idea that they can choose something that they A) don’t vote, B) don’t run for office and C) don’t donate money to political campaigns,” Udot said. Zhirinovsky Wants Fines For Using Foreign Words T H E S T. P E T E R S B U R G T I M ES MOSCOW — The leader of the Liberal Democratic Party, Vladimir Zhirinovsky, said his party is preparing legislation that would impose fines on officials who use foreign words at work when there is a Russian equivalent. “The Russian language must be freed from trash and foreign words,” Zhirinovsky told journalists, Interfax reported. The legislation also stipulates dismissal from one’s job in certain cases. He said lawyers are currently examining the bill, after which it will be submitted to the State Duma for consideration by lawmakers. When asked what sanctions would be imposed on officials who violate the rules set out in the bill, Zhirinovsky said: “Fines and dismissal from your job — they’re obliged to adhere to the norms of the Russian language.” “Why say ‘dealer’ when there is ‘posrednik,’ or ‘performance’ instead of ‘predstavleniya’ — soon they’ll even force us to use English pronunciation,” he said. It was unclear Tuesday whether the legislation would also apply to other workers in the public sphere. Zhirinovsky’s proposal is the latest in a series of moves taken by the Duma in recent months to extirpate foreign influence. The so-called “Anti-Magnitsky Law” passed late last year bans adoptions of Russian orphans by U.S. families, and a law passed earlier last year requires nongovernmental organizations that conduct “political activity” and receive foreign funding to register as “foreign agents.” A proposal has also been put forward to ban officials from owning property abroad or sending their children to study in foreign countries. Lawmakers have taken on less politically charged areas of foreign influence as well. Duma Deputy Sergei Zheleznyak of United Russia called for movie theaters that show foreign films to face a tax that all other movie theaters would be exempt from. That same bill also called for a quota on foreign films. Filin Awaits More Surgery T H E S T. P E T E R S B U R G T I M ES MOSCOW — Bolshoi Theater artistic director Sergei Filin will undergo two more surgeries after an unknown attacker splashed his face with sulfuric acid last week, doctors said Monday. On Tuesday, Filin will have some areas of skin replaced. They were severely damaged in the attack. On Wednesday, he will undergo a second eye surgery, doctors said, Interfax reported. But Filin’s eyesight will not return completely for at least six months, a theater spokeswoman told Komsomolskaya Pravda on Friday. The theater’s supervisory board will send Filin for rehabilitation to a foreign clinic, probably in Germany or Israel, she said. Filin, 42, said he was certain that the attack was linked to his work, and police have tentatively agreed. Business Wednesday, January 23, 2013 ❖ 5 MICEX Shuns Foreign Stock Markets With IPO By Howard Amos T H E S T. P E T E R S B U R G T I M E S MOSCOW — The Moscow Exchange announced Monday that it will shun the foreign stock markets traditionally tapped by Russian companies and go ahead with an initial public offering on its own Russian trading platforms. The size of the stake in the unified exchange being offered to foreign and domestic investors was not disclosed, but the company is looking to raise at least $500 million, said a source familiar with the situation. The Moscow Exchange was formed by the 2012 merger of MICEX and RTS, the country’s leading bourses, and was supposed to help the Kremlin transform Moscow into an international financial center. Experts said that the success of the IPO could be a litmus test for how far this aspiration has been realized. “[The Moscow Exchange’s] whole business case is that people should do more business in Moscow,” said Bruce Bower, a partner and portfolio manager at Verno Capital. Media reports had previously suggested that the company would seek a dual flotation in London and Moscow, in a format similar to the biggest listings by Russian companies last year. Targeting both London and Moscow, state-owned lender Sberbank raised $5.2 billion in September 2012 and telecommunications giant Megafon $1.3 billion two months later. The Moscow Exchange has “never discussed a float in London,” said Nikita Bekasov, a company spokesman. “The Exchange’s own listing is a key element of our strategy to promote the development of local capital markets,” said chairman of the Moscow Exchange supervisory board and Central Bank Deputy Chairman Sergei Shvetsov in an emailed statement. Others were more blunt. “We want to show that Russia is an attractive place for investors,” said a source close to the company who requested anonymity to speak freely, adding that this was why Moscow had been picked over London. Faced with a choice between London and Moscow, however, investors have previously been reluctant to settle on the Russian capital. Sberbank executives said in advance of their secondary public offering last year that up to 15 percent of the company’s placement could be on the Moscow Exchange — but, in the end, 97 percent went to London. In one of the most recent IPO announcements, private rail freight operator NefteTransService said last week that it is seeking to float only on the London Stock Exchange. Unlike their more mature compatriots in Europe, the U.S. and Asia, Russian stock exchanges have traditionally been characterized by speculative investors, a dearth of long-term capital and high volatility. And trading volume declines in Moscow have been steeper than other financial centers throughout 2012. The Moscow Exchange declined to comment on the exact timing of its IPO, but reports suggest that it is planned for mid-February. Nor did it comment on how the IPO funds would be used. The company last week announced earnings of 15.9 billion rubles ($525 million) for 2012 — 36.7 percent higher than the MICEX Index reported for the same period in 2011. The exchange was valued at $4.5 billion when the merger between MICEX and dollar-denominated RTS was announced, but Central Bank Deputy Chairman Alexei Ulyukayev said early in 2012 that the joint entity was actually worth closer to $6 billion. He has since said that its value is likely to have diminished. Cabinet: No Reinstatement By Anatoly Medetsky T H E S T. P E T E R S B U R G T I M E S MOSCOW — The Cabinet has rejected a proposal to reinstate government officials on the boards of statecontrolled companies. It has also nominated several newcomers to sit on the boards at such behemoths as Gazprom, the Federal Grid Company and Svyazinvest, Vedomosti reported Monday. By keeping the boardrooms free of officials, Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev’s Cabinet seemed to signal that it still disapproves of excessive state influence over business even after the ministers backed the megatakeover of privately owned TNK-BP by state-run Rosneft. “Overall, it’s a positive development,” Alexander Shevchuk, deputy executive director of the Association for the Protection of Investor Rights, said about the decision on the boards. During Medvedev’s presidency from 2008 to 2012, he ordered an exodus of officials from the boards in a bid to make the economy more transparent and competitive. Deputy prime ministers Igor Shuvalov and Arkady Dvorkovich rebuffed a proposal by the Federal State Property Management Agency that officials make their way back to the companies to be privatized by 2016. The agency said they would oversee preparations for the sell-offs. Instead, Shuvalov and Dvorkovich listed only people who have no government jobs — at least at the moment. The nominees included former Energy Minister Sergei Shmatko, who would vie for a seat at the Federal Grid Company and the InterRegional Grid Company, which run electricity grids. The Cabinet submitted its proposal to President Vladimir Putin’s administration for approval. Putin’s spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, said the Kremlin would respond in the next few days, Vedomosti reported. Shevchuk said he was concerned that a lack of officials on the boards could delay decision-making. “Government officials on a board is quite a fine idea,” he said. “It’s better than having someone who would take triple the time to get the government’s approval for something.” In addition to Shmatko, the Cabinet listed a fair share of other would-be novices on the boards. Most of the new faces would appear at telecom provider Svyazinvest. They are IBS Deputy CEO Anton Yevgenyev; chairman of Thermal Devices Research Institute Sergei Malinov; adviser to the chief executive of the Research Center for Industrial Technology and Aerial Navigation Systems, Vladimir Yakovlev; and deputy head of Moscow city property department, Konstantin Pesotsky. Back to Work alexander belenky / spt Workers trim trees on the Field of Mars on Tuesday. The city is now fully back to work after the holiday celebrations, although January is traditionally a quiet month for businesses in the city. Deputies Seek Karpov Probe By Alexander Bratersky T H E S T. P E T E R S B U RG T I M E S MOSCOW — A group of United Russia lawmakers have accused a colleague, world chess champion Anatoly Karpov, of lobbying on behalf of a tobacco company, and they asked the Justice Ministry to see whether he can be labeled a foreign agent. The attack against Karpov is seen as part of a smoldering conflict between lobbyists, as anti-smoking legislation is pending in the State Duma, experts said. The country’s $22 billion tobacco market is currently the second-largest in the world, surpassed only by China. Several Duma deputies, including ones from United Russia, stated in a letter to the ministry that the charitable foundation Peace and Harmony, cofounded by Karpov, is a partner of Japan Tobacco International, one of the three largest tobacco companies in Russia. The move was prompted by a proposal by Karpov to exclude an article from the anti-smoking bill that addresses the illegal tobacco trade. The anti-tobacco bill, which passed in first reading, is seen as one of the strongest government attempts to curb rampant smoking in the country. It will affect 44 million citizens, or a third of the population. About 400,000 people die annually from smoking related diseases, according to offical figures. The law would ban smoking in most public places and introduce tough punishments for violators. “The point of our collective letter is to check whether a deputy’s foundation is a foreign agent,” United Russia deputy Alyona Arshinova told Izvestia Monday. Arshinova was referring to a controversial new law that obliges any organization receiving foreign grants and engaging in political activity to register as a foreign agent. The law was mainly aimed at human rights organizations that have voiced opposition to the Kremlin. Anatoly Vereshchagin, communication director for Japan Tobacco International, said his company works with one of the partners of Karpov’s foundation, which is not prohibited by the legislation. Karpov was not available for comment Monday. Karpov, a senior deputy who sits on the Economic Policy Committee, told Izvestia his colleagues’ reaction to his proposed amendment was “overheated.” He said the language of the article he seeks to exclude is preserved in the World Health Organization’s Protocol to Eliminate Illicit Trade in Tobacco Products, which the Russian parliament plans to ratify. Vereshchagin said Monday that after the protocol is ratified it will take priority over national legislation. “All tobacco companies are supporting the fight against the illegal market,” Vereshchagin said. That sentiment was repeated by Vadim Zhelnin, the head of Tabakprom, an industry lobbyist group. He said, however, that the industry is more concerned with different provisions of the article that Kasparov wants to exclude. Both the anti-tobacco legislation and the WHO protocol require that all tobacco products be marked with special codes so illegal trading can be tracked. Zhelnin said tobacco companies are dubious about the required markings. He said such an approach didn’t prove effective when it was introduced for the alcohol industry. “It hasn’t produced an effect, while legal producers have suffered,” he said. In 2005, producers of alcoholic beverages were subjected to a policy that forced them to pay for the installation of costly equipment to mark their products with special stamps. The idea to implement such a system for the tobacco industry has received a similarly negative response from the Agriculture Ministry, which said existing excise stamps are enough to control the tobacco trade. However, Slon online columnist Dmitry Yanin noted in a recent article that the ministry’s response repeats a similar argument from British American Tobacco almost word for word. Report Assesses Popular Discontent Scenarios By Anatoly Medetsky T H E S T. P E T E R S B U R G T I M E S MOSCOW — How popular discontent will play out is one of the key uncertainties that the World Economic Forum identified for Russia’s long-term economic development in a report released Tuesday. Attendees of the annual forum in Davos, Switzerland, which opened Tuesday, are set to question Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev about this and the report’s findings, the forum said in a statement. In a report titled “Scenarios for the Russian Federation,” the forum also names two more potential gamechangers: Major shifts in global energy trade and Russia’s ability to reform its institutions. The conclusions of the research will come up for discussion at a session led by Medvedev on Wednesday, Jan. 23. “During the session, Prime Minister Medvedev will answer related questions from the audience as well as from social media users worldwide,” the forum said. In addition to street protests, which have become the hallmark of domestic politics, the report also examined the surge in U.S. shale gas production and Russia’s institutional environment, stating that the country appeared to have made little headway against corruption despite a significant rise in per capita wealth over recent years. Depending on how the situation unfolds, the report outlines three scenarios to challenge thinking about Russia’s economic development through 2030. “We believe ‘Scenarios for the Russian Federation’ delivers an accurate portrayal of the challenges facing Russia,” Borge Brende, a managing director at the World Economic Forum, said in the statement. “We hope it provides policymakers and planners with insights they can use to optimize the country’s long-term development.” One outlook, called regional rebalancing, stipulates that unexpected sources, such as the resourcefulness of the country’s regions, will drive economic change. Institutional reform will progress mainly at the regional level and stagnate at the national one. Another scenario, called precarious stability, explored the consequences of a sudden and sustained drop in oil prices, concluding that the government would likely choose to preserve economic stability over reform in a time of crisis. In the third possibility envisioned in the report, beyond complacency, high oil prices stall institutional reform while popular discontent grows as a result of inefficiency in the provision of public services. Feature Wednesday, January 23, 2013 ❖ 6 Martial Art Shows You Can’t Beat the System By Melinee Prochasson T H E S T. P E T E R S B U R G T I M E S I t’s the middle of a December afternoon, and in a spartan hall in northwest Moscow, a group of men and women of various ages are lying on the floor, while others are defending themselves from opponents wielding whips. This is not some sado-masochistic ritual, but a seminar devoted to a form of the Russian martial art Systema. Originally developed as a military practice for Russian special forces, Systema remains a relatively unheralded practice. Nowadays this training is also employed in the form of an education based on self-knowledge and control of others through the practice of defensive hand-to-hand combat. There are several branches of Systema, each following a different pedagogy. The seminar in Moscow is taking place at the school of Mikhail Ryabko, founder and developer of one of the most popular forms of Systema, known as the Ryabko Style. Ryabko, a Special Forces colonel who has been involved in combat training since the age of 15, has seen his passion blossom into what is now a network of 200 affiliate schools around the world. The main principles of Ryabko’s Systema are an absence of rank and precise techniques and an emphasis on improvisation and playful exercises. No physical protection is worn in this contact sport, in which breathing technique is a major focus. “Genius things are simple, and I think that Systema incorporates the God-given principle of power and enРЕКЛАМА ergy at minimum costs,” said Vadim Yusupov, a 24-year-old Ryabko Systema adherent who has practiced boxing for two years and Shotokan karate for nine years. “You can come to [Systema] with a rich experience of other martial art classes and with strength of body and good knowledge. But from this moment, everything is going to change: You come not to get additional information and techniques, but to cut out unnecessary things in your life. You will discover with amazement how great your power is. This power sits in harmony with nature, simple natural motions and relaxation,” he added. The origins of Systema are difficult to assert, but it is believed to have grown out of various foreign-influenced martial arts that existed in imperial Russia and that practically disappeared after the Revolution. “Some things are true, others are basically unverifiable,” said Vladimir Vasilyev, a former student of Mikhail Ryabko’s school and now an instructor in Toronto, Canada. “The changes in government in Russia [during the last century] didn’t help to conserve a trace of what happened,” he added. Despite its military origins, a friendly atmosphere reigned at the Moscow seminar and a number of foreign enthusiasts were present. Participants were welcoming and keen for observers — and even journalists — to join in. The participants demonstrate a remarkable readiness to shed any restraints about their self-image in order to do the exercises and assume some highly unusual positions. After the training sessions, a group discussion takes place. The participants talk about the exercises, and how people feel about the course. The idea of community and dialogue is an integral part of Systema. The ability to express and understand oneself is one of the key focuses of the activity, with the aim of subsequently being able to employ this ability in daily situations. A system originally developed for warfare has become a system for coping with the demands of daily life — and this is a view shared by many adherents of the Ryabko Style. Stéphane Vartarian, a Ryabko Style instructor in France, says that Systema helped him to understand himself better. “It has shown me how it is my thought that determines my daily situations,” Vartarian said. “I have learned to analyze my feelings and thus make better use of my intuition in day-to-day situations.” For Yevgeny Sokolov, a 53-year-old Special Forces reserve officer who is a scientist and MBA lecturer by profession, as well as an expert in psychological techniques and training officer of the Ryabko Systema, the community aspect of Systema is of crucial importance. “Firstly, it’s a like-minded community,” he said. “The community of permanent participants and mentors is based on the spiritual values of the Russian Orthodox Church; it’s grounded in patriotism and in the ancient military traditions of Russia, but it’s accessible for people of different nationalities and religions. “Secondly, Systema offers an opportunity to constantly improve yourself melinee prochasson / spt Mikhail Ryabko (l) demonstrates exercises during the Systema seminar in Moscow. spiritually, psychologically and physically, regardless of your age, sex, level of basic training and health. Everyone can discover something useful in it, from health-improving practices to unique fighting techniques,” said Sokolov. “Finally, Systema makes it possible to achieve a high degree of self-control and self-correction, which helps to maintain balance and efficiently defend yourself under any circumstances,” he said. Ryabko’s school represents just one of a number of different approaches to Systema. Another popular style is the Kadochnikov Systema, named after its creator, Alexei Kadochnikov. Both the Ryabko and Kadochnikov forms of Systema are based on the idea of developing a better knowledge of one’s internal state, but despite being branches of the same discipline, the two “systems” have important differences: Ryabko’s style is a system of effective breathing and relaxation, whereas the technique developed by Kadochnikov is based on biomechanics, which visualizes the body as a set of angles, levers and points of application of force. One of the key moments of the Kadochnikov system is to unbalance your opponent, according to Nikita Rozin, a student of the method. “To do this, you have to make the body of your opponent relaxed,” said Rozin. “There are many tricks to do this — a punch to the throat or an impact to the eyes, grabbing their hair, impacts on certain points on the body, sudden yells and other tricks,” he added. “After these tricks, usually you have about one or two seconds while your opponent is shocked. Then you start to unbalance the body of your opponent using the system of leverage.” According to Rozin, there is nothing new in this approach — which is based on simple laws of mechanics from physics textbooks — because the body is built according to a system of levers. “After that, when your opponent is on the ground, you get him into a painful hold or more often trample on the melinee prochasson / spt Ryabko’s style is a system of relaxation. joints of your opponent to prevent any riposte,” said Rozin. “An essential point of the system is to react to the opponent only when they strike you. As a self-defense practice, in Systema they teach technical aspects based on the lever principle, and then let you ad lib.” Rozin, whose father is a boxer, used to practice Aikido, but found it difficult to apply many of the techniques he learned in that martial art. He then took up Systema instead, and was surprised by how quickly he made progress. “After one year of practice I felt very confident in my skills. I started to know how to act in different situations,” says Rozin. “When someone attacks you in a confined space (for example an elevator or a train), when you have several opponents, when they go for you with a knife, club or whatever. And that is very important in Systema, because it’s primarily a system of self-defense and they teach you how to defend yourself as efficiently as you can. I remember that after one year I could “see” around 360 degrees of my body; it seems mystical when you hear about it, but it’s real.” Arts&Culture Wednesday, January 23, 2013 ❖ 7 What Katya did next Freed Pussy Riot member Yekaterina Samutsevich talks to The St. Petersburg Times about the events of 2012. T h e S t. P e t e r s b u r g T i m e s T welve months after feminist punk collective Pussy Riot’s “Putin Has Pissed Himself” breakthrough protest performance on Red Square, group member Yekaterina Samutsevich, who was freed by an appeal court in October, came to St. Petersburg to take part in a roundtable organized by the Center for Independent Social Research. Called “Class, Gender, Politics: Russia After Pussy Riot,” it was dedicated to the imprisoned group member Maria Alyokhina, whose appeal was heard — and rejected — last week in Berezniki in the Perm Krai, some 2,000 kilometers away. On Sunday, Samutsevich, 30, spoke to The St. Petersburg Times via Skype about events surrounding Pussy Riot and Russia in general throughout the past year. Q: What are your impressions of your visit to St. Petersburg? A: I came to take part in the roundtable, but the actual reason was that the roundtable was dedicated to Maria Alyokhina and a court hearing about a postponement of her sentence that was taking place that day. That’s why I decided to support Masha by coming to St. Petersburg and talking about her and problems of media coverage of our case. I liked the roundtable a lot, I liked the Center for Independent Social Research, very intelligent and sincere people work there. I haven’t spoken to such people for a long time, and I was pleased that they supported us and invited me. There were many specialists on gender issues at the roundtable; there was even a specialist on the problems of female prisons there. I really appreciated this professional approach to the topic. As for St. Petersburg, it was a sunny day when I arrived, so that put me in a good mood. Especially when I just arrived, because I had hopes that Masha could be released. But obviously, as soon as I learned that Masha’s postponement appeal had been rejected, my mood got a lot worse. I found out when the roundtable had already started, so probably wasn’t very cheerful during it, but I had good reason to be upset. Q: Pussy Riot last gave an interview to The St. Petersburg Times a year ago — just after the “Putin Has Pissed Himself” performance on Red Square and a month before the first two members of the group were arrested. The protest movement was still at its peak, but you were unhappy that it had turned into sanctioned rallies and said that the Kremlin was not afraid of them. Would you say this tendency has prevailed and the protest movement has subsided? A: Well, not everything has subsided, because people see what is happening. The authorities attempt to present the situation like this: There was an opposition, it made some weak moves, but failed to make a critical point in a convincing way, so people didn’t choose the opposition but chose Putin again. But obviously, thinking people who follow the situation see an entirely different picture. There was an opposition and still is. The other thing is that the authorities have started to take a definite political stance. They saw a certain threat and decided to attack the problem from different sides to cut away the ground from under opposition-minded citizens. They resorted to repressive measures — such as our arrests for virtually nothing, and those of the May 6 protesters — and distortion of the situation in the media at the same time. Libel against various political figures as well as the situation in general came from the television the whole time. The authorities reduced the entire opposition to two or three people and attacked them, often using libel. In reality the opposition is not two or three people, but a great number of citizens who are unhappy about the situation in the country and are ready to change the system. It doesn’t mean that there’s no opposition, it does exist — but now we have to take the authorities’ strategy into account, analyze it and build some new line of struggle. Q: Propaganda against Pussy Riot frequently contained accusations of things actually done not by Pussy Riot, but done in the past by the Voina art group, including a stunt in which a woman stole a chicken from a supermarket by concealing it in her vagina, or, as Putin told Angela Merkel, hanging an “effigy of a Jew” in a store. Questions about those performances at the roundtable showed that this strategy even worked with informed people, didn’t it? A: The information about the chicken and the “effigy of a Jew” was obviously targeted at people not informed about what had happened in action art and Russian art in general during the 2000s. It’s aimed at people who are not interested in such things and who — if they happen to see some video or documentation [of such things] — are simply shocked, and simply won’t understand anything. That’s what it was calculated for — for this shock stemming from a lack of understanding. The authorities did everything to collect such “strange” information, which was in reality false. Because yes, these things did happen, but they were different and connected to entirely different people. It relied on the effect that people would hear snatches of it in passing and would not try to get to the bottom of it or analyze in a detailed way. They hear about [Voina’s] performance at the Biological Museum [in which the group staged an orgy] or about a chicken stunt and think that Pussy Riot are perverted girls who have sex in public and then go to the cathedral and desecrate the amvon and solea [sections of Orthodox churches in which women are not allowed]. It’s targeted at a lack of understanding, a lack of information and lack of critical thinking, and maybe a lack of analysis of the authorities’ strategy. Q: How do you respond to criticism that the punk prayer in the Cathedral of Christ the Savior presented a chance for the authorities to split society? A: In reality, what existed before was revealed here; we didn’t produce anything new, it simply became visible. People have been divided over many issues for a long time, especially along the lines of conservative values and contemporary art in such forms as action art or media art. This division has existed for a long time and has been created artificially by our authorities’ cultural policy. There’s practically no education in the field of art. That’s why there are so few artists. They’re either self-taught, or come from the Rodchenko School. It’s good that it exists in Moscow, but it still doesn’t produce many young artists, and the kind of art that would be open and visible is scarce. That’s why people don’t fully understand what they are seeing when they see work by Pussy Riot. Of course, the authorities have done a lot to present contemporary art, es- lates the right of freedom of speech and the right of freedom of expression guaranteed by the European Convention on Human Rights. It violates the rights of three people: Nadya, Masha and me. sergey chernov / spt By Sergey Chernov Yekaterina Samutsevich at the roundtable in St. Petersburg last week. pecially action art, as hooliganism. The opinion that this is not art but some ordinary hooligans who are destroying values is constantly being implanted, with other points of view suppressed and going unheard. That’s where this misbalance around contemporary art, especially political art comes from. This division of opinions is the result. Q: It was clear that all the Pussy Riot performances annoyed the Kremlin, especially the Red Square one. Was the punk prayer simply used as an excuse to stop the group’s activities and make an example of it? ‘The international support showed that Pussy Riot was not a bunch of freaks who had done stuff that noone could understand. A: Well, yes, I think the group’s entire work caused annoyance starting from its first performances, because — as it was said at the Zamoskvoretsky Court — they contained “calls to extremism, to overthrow the regime,” and so on. They were annoyed about everything. Either it simply came to boiling point, or the people from the special services who were in charge of monitoring us were given orders to open a criminal investigation and arrest us. Q: Nadezhda Tolokonnikova and Maria Alyokhina were arrested on March 3, 2012, on the eve of Putin’s inauguration, leading to speculation that the arrests were a present for him. Do you think it was his personal revenge for your anti-Putin performances? A: Actually, it’s not that simple. When we talk about the situation in Russia, we are not just talking about Putin. The powers that be are not one person, even if he’s the president and the top man. In reality, we are dealing with the whole system that is in power in Russia, and there are many political forces at play. Putin as one person has simply become the symbol of the system and it’s only natural that the system protects itself, that’s why it reacts in such an aggressive way to any damage done to this symbol, to what it sees as an insult to him, even if in reality it’s just a critical statement. Q: But didn’t he speak almost sensually about the two-year sentences using the diminutive word “dvushechka” [for the two-year prison sentence handed to the women] and sounding as if it was indeed a personal matter for him? A: Yes, sure. I think he has a certain image, a certain role, and this image is pretty strange now, let’s put it that way. It’s analyzed by the Western press, because many are surprised by his behavior. Because a head of state shouldn’t behave like this. They are always on guard, they watch their words — both what they say and how they say it — how they dress, how they sit, it’s literally like that. And allowing themselves to say such things, in such a tone, and tell lies in a conversation with the leader of another country, like in the conversation with Angela Merkel, is simply impermissible. There are many versions: It may be a deliberate anti-Western move, to demonstrate such a disdainful, utterly contemptuous attitude toward the rest of the world, or maybe something is happening to him, maybe he’s simply going insane. It’s like [former Russian leader Boris] Yeltsin, who used to get drunk and behave in a weird way. Everybody is analyzing why he behaves like that, and what he said, but the authorities’ actual strategy — for instance, the reform of education — is not analyzed well enough. So it could be a deceptive move as well. Perhaps instead of paying so much attention to this inappropriate behavior, we should bear it in mind and pay more attention to things that are actually happening now. Q: What’s happening with the ban on Pussy Riot’s videos? A: The Moscow City Court will hear my appeal on Jan. 24, as well as my second complaint about the refusal of the court to acknowledge me as an interested party. I don’t know the order in which they will be heard, but there’s a hope that maybe the court will send the case back for reconsideration. It’s another stage of the struggle. Then, if they reject it, it’ll go immediately as an appendix to our complaint to the European Court of Human Rights, because it vio- Q: How did international support affect the Pussy Riot situation? A: Such support could not fail to have an effect, it was very strong. But the influence was multi-faceted, it can’t be said that it brought great benefits, that everybody was ecstatic because of such support. Obviously, the authorities started to react and create their own media campaign. The stronger support was, the stronger the resistance of the media that serve the authorities. And so a kind of media war began. There is a confrontation of different ideas: The idea of freedom of speech, which is turned upside down in Russian media that speak about a threat to traditional values. There’s a permanent struggle going on, and that’s OK. But the support showed that Pussy Riot was not a bunch of freaks who had done some stuff that no-one could understand. It became clear that it is art, that it’s very articulate art, it’s political art, it’s feminist art. This was understood by a majority in the West. Then there was understanding about the situation in Russia. Because Putin and the other people who represent power say that we have democracy and freedom of speech. It turned out that that is not true, that it is all lies. That Russia had huge problems with freedom of speech, with human rights. Q: What’s your opinion about “Pussy Riot — A Punk Prayer,” a feature-length documentary shown at the Sundance Film Festival last week? A: I’ve seen a rough cut of the film, but what I saw was filmed in a quality, good way. As far as I understood, its makers tried to present the situation as objectively as they could, that is, to include and show opinions from different sides. But to be honest, it seemed to me that mostly, opinions had been collected that if not quite against us, were definitely not for us. I speak with a lot of people who support us ideologically — who don’t simply pity us as young women, but support our ideas. I think there’s quite a few such people in Russia, but this documentary makes it seem that the situation is entirely different — that everybody is against us. That even our relatives misunderstand us, or don’t fully understand us. Q: In a recent interview with the French magazine Les Inrockuptibles, you said that it’s difficult to continue as Pussy Riot under the current conditions and invited people to repeat what the group had done, which was interpreted by some as an announcement that Pussy Riot is disbanding. Is that the case? A: Well, it definitely wasn’t a statement about disbanding the group, because otherwise I would have put it in a different way, like: “The group is disbanded, it doesn’t exist anymore.” Of course it exists, and the group members exist too. But I meant that it is difficult to continue in the same way as before the arrest, because the situation for us, the actual members of the group, has changed radically. And then I meant that Pussy Riot has shown what can be done within a cultural form of protest. As creators of the group, we had a very strong desire to have people not watching us in silence as we deal with the difficult trial. It would be worthwhile to try and do the same thing that we did, or to somehow use what we had offered to the people. 8 wednesday, january 23, 2013 Mutiny at the Mikhailovsky By Viktoria Koltsova T h e S t. P e t e r s b u r g T i m e s B enjamin Britten’s 1961 opera “Billy Budd” will see its Russia premiere on Jan. 24, 25 and 26 on the stage of the Mikhailovsky Theater. The theater is staging the Vienna State Opera’s production from 2001, directed by the eminent German theater director Willy Decker. As the world marks the British composer’s centenary in 2013, Decker is visiting Russia for the first time and is personally recreating his version of the opera for the Mikhailovsky. “I have worked with wonderful Russian singers, but I have never staged anything in Russia,” Decker was quoted by the theater’s press service as saying. “The fact that Britten’s opera has never been performed here either adds to the responsibility,” he said. The libretto is based on Herman Melville’s novella “Billy Budd,” about a young sailor with a stammer being bullied aboard a ship in 1797. The libretto was written at Britten’s request by the novelist E. M. Forster, an expert on Melville’s work, who wrote it together with Eric Crozier. The action takes place on board the ship, and there is not one female character. The title role will be sung by Andrei Bondarenko, while German bass-baritone Johannes von Duisburg and British bass Graeme Broadbent will alternate in the role of John Claggart, the ship’s master-at-arms who sets out to make trouble for Billy. Von Duisburg first played Claggart in Decker’s production seven years ago. “The clash between Billy Budd and Claggart is an example of the eternal struggle between good and evil,” said the bass-baritone. “Claggart is a man devoid of feelings; his only enjoyment comes from his ability to manipulate the crew of HMS Indomitable. He is a very slippery character. Listen to the music: Everything around my character moves quickly — well-coordinated work is underway — but Claggart’s arrival is accompanied by the appearance of legato, glissando... This is a man who can do anything he wants, but always formally within the law, like some politicians. “Then comes the entrance of Billy Budd, whose sincerity and purity captivates the whole crew, Claggart included. The master-at-arms encounters something unfamiliar — emotion, affection — and because of this, he begins to hate Billy. It is the kind of lovehate relationship that leads to disaster,” said von Duisburg. His counterpart Broadbent sees the HMS Indomitable as a model of society in miniature. “All the classes are represented, from the aristocracy in the person of Captain Vere to virtual criminals, since anyone could be conscripted as a sailor,” he said. “The confrontation between Billy Budd and Claggart is actually a story of the struggle between good and evil, only in this case everyone turns out to be the loser. As a result, the laws by which society lives are victorious over humanity: After Billy accidentally kills Claggart, Michael Poehn / Wiener Staatsoper The theater prepares to stage ‘Billy Budd,’ Benjamin Britten’s opera about male relationships at sea. ‘Billy Budd,’ a tale of bullying with tragic consequences, is set on board a ship and features an all-male cast. acters’ themes are very clear and the details communicate the drama of their relationships. There are amazing ensembles in which you sense the scale of the ocean, waves and hurricanes. When I first heard this opera, I immediately imagined everything as a complete whole — the atmosphere on that specific ship. I think that out of all of Britten’s operas Billy Budd is the most musically accessible to an audience.” Mikhail Tatarnikov, musical director at the Mikhailovsky Theater, described Britten as one of two exceptional fig- the captain has to decide whether or not he should be executed. In human terms, he understands Billy and knows he is innocent, but according to the law, the sailor deserves death. The law turns out to be more important than morals. Bondarenko says he dreamed of singing the role of Billy Budd. “When Claggart notices how much everyone loves Billy, he becomes angry because he himself will never be like Billy, and at the same time he’s afraid that he likes Billy himself,” he said. “This is conveyed wonderfully in Britten’s music: In the score the char- ures in 20th-century music, alongside Czech composer Leo Janácek. “The most powerful influence [Britten] experienced was the influence of life itself,” said Tatarnikov. “He suffered from a very strong, internal anguish: Basically, his entire life was a challenge to society. And although that’s not very good for a normal person, it’s excellent for creativity, for art,” he said. “Billy Budd” will be shown at 7 p.m. on Jan. 24, 25 and 26 at the Mikhailovsky Theater, 1 Ploshchad Iskusstv. Tel. 595 4305. www.mikhailovsky.ru. Petersburg: Poetic and prosaic By Galina Stolyarova T HE S T. P E T ER S BURG T IME S A cultural guide to St. Petersburg that was published in October by Academia Rossica in cooperation with Oxygen Books in London, “City-Pick St. Petersburg” offers a fascinating view of Russia’s northern capital as seen by more than sixty writers, poets, dancers and artists from different eras. “It is an essential read — slip it into your bag alongside a Rough Guide,” is the advice to readers from Waterstones Books Quarterly, a literary magazine published by the U.K. book retailer Waterstones. While a classic guidebook serves travelers up heaps of helpful practicalities, from ideas for quick refuels between sightseeing and water taxi schedules to skating rink locations and warnings about pickpockets’ favorite hangouts, “City-Pick St. Petersburg” offers readers a wealth of different flavors of St. Petersburg, creating a fabulous sense of the city. Flipping through the pages, the reader is presented with a diverse and beautiful portrait of the city, and a fair idea of what St. Petersburg is about. “Along the canals, the globes of the street lamps throw pale circles onto the pastel walls; in the deserted Square of the Decembrists, the Bronze Horseman looks lost, the only complex, human form in the middle of a vast geometric space, standing out in the mist made of mingled water and sky, the receding perspectives of the palaces converging on the shining spire of the Peter and Paul Fortress,” reads an excerpt from a 1987 essay by French journalist and travel writer Olivier Rolin. A rather different image of the city comes from an essay by the British writer Duncan Fallowell, the author of “One Hot Summer in St. Petersburg.” “St. Isaac’s balloons ahead, the cross mounted on an anchor at its apex (anchors and tritons are everywhere in St. Petersburg),” he writes. “This is the almightiest cathedral in the city, with Samsonic columns to prove it outside, and within an opulence of malachite and lapis lazuli and harlequinades of colored glass.” Divided into nine chapters, the anthology interweaves memoirs and diaries with fiction and documentary prose as well as historical essays and travelers’ notebooks. Incorporated in the book are short fragments from the novels of some of Russia’s greatest writers, including Leo Tolstoy’s “War And Peace,” Ivan Goncharov’s “Oblomov,” Fyodor Dostoyevsky’s “The Idiot” and Alexander Pushkin’s “The Captain’s Daughter.” The lion’s share of the anthology, however, is devoted to much more recent writing, encompassing the prose of Vladimir Nabokov and Andrei Bitov, and the recollections of poet and Novel Prize winner Joseph Brodsky, composer Sergei Prokofiev and filmmaker Alexander Sokurov. The most sobering and perhaps also the most emotional chapter, “City Under Siege,” is devoted to the 900-day Nazi Siege of Leningrad during World War II, the most tragic period in the history of the city. Here, a translation of the sharp official proclamation by Leningrad Defense Chiefs and Soviet Party Leaders, giving chilling descriptions of the cruel and ruthless enemy, is fused with a moving story, the novel “The Conductor,” Sarah Quigley’s hu- for spt A new book explores facets of St. Petersburg from dark episodes in its history to modern Russian women. The cover of ‘City-Pick St. Petersburg.’ mane account loosely based on the events leading to the writing of Shostakovich’s Seventh Symphony and the preparation of its premiere under the baton of conductor Karl Eliasberg. With winter temperatures lower than minus 30 degrees Celsius and no electricity or heating during the second winter of the Siege of Leningrad, the orchestra’s pianist Alexander Kamensky kept his hands warm by placing two scorching bricks on both sides of the instrument to radiate some heat. Eliasberg was so weak he was driven to rehearsals on a sledge. The Leningrad Bolshoi Symphony Orchestra gave 300 performances during the nearly 900 days of the siege, but the performance of Shostakovich’s Seventh Symphony was special. Many Leningraders who didn’t have a radio at home would gather on the streets to listen to orchestral music coming from the loudspeakers. It was an opportunity to rise above physical weakness, fear and starvation. The book is primarily aimed at culture vultures, barely touching upon mundane matters such as the local political hierarchy, gastronomy or sports. Instead, we find the legendary Russian ballerina Anna Pavlova describing her studies at the Imperial Ballet School. “I learnt my art under as nearly perfect conditions as one ever found on this earth,” reads the ballerina’s story, originally published in the U.S. in “The Lady’s Home Journal” in September 1924. “The Russian ballet owes its subtle perfection of detail, its greatness ... to the fact that it is made up of dancers who from the day they went to live in the dormitories of the Imperial School saw nothing — were surrounded by nothing — but beauty — beauty — and the highest standards physically, mentally, morally and spiritually.” Another renowned Russian ballerina, Tamara Karsavina, remembers on these pages a precious tradition that still exists today, that of the finest pupils of the Vaganova Ballet Academy — the former Imperial School — being allowed to dance on the venerable stage of the Court Theater at the Hermitage. On each such occasion, one member or another of the Imperial Family would come to have supper with the artists — the part that nobody wanted to miss! In one of the more recently written travel features, the U.K. journalist Miranda Sawyer delivers a bitter and rather sarcastic account of her observa- tions of apparently overdressed modern Russian women, whom the author slags down as “Swarowski-studded glamazons” and “stout grumpy lady trolls.” “Today’s Russian woman is tall and gorgeous and dressed like a Selfridges Christmas tree,” Sawyer wrote in her piece “Back in the U.S.S.R.,” originally published in British newspaper The Observer in 2011. “There is no part of her clothing that is plain: Everything is stonewashed, or appliqued, or has diamante dangly bits, or is made out of actual leopard. Heels are killer. Make-up can be viewed at a hundred paces. Our trousers — and us — are just too dull.” One would bet that Tim Stanley saw a rather different Russian female crowd in the new St. Petersburg art galleries that he describes with enthusiasm and admiration in his essay, discussing the “sudden northern Renaissance.” It is not dress sense that Stanley examines but rather the phenomenon of the appearance of a whole array of wonderful new museums of the caliber of the New Museum and Erarta Museum of Contemporary Art. As for the appearance of the city and its residents, the male opinion that can be found in the book is much more delightful to hear. As Viv Groskov of the British Airways “High Life” magazine puts it, “St. Petersburg is seductive, charming, and a little eccentric.” Most locals, regardless of their sex, age, occupation and social status, could not agree more. “City-Pick St. Petersburg” is published in English by Oxygen Books, 272 pages, and is on sale for around $16. wednesday, january 23, 2013 9 The one that got away By Viktoria Koltsova T H E S T. P E T E R S B U R G T I M E S T he celebrated Russian émigré ballet dancer and actor Mikhail Baryshnikov, who celebrates his 65th birthday this month, is being paid tribute to in St. Petersburg with an exhibition. “Ballet Is a Castle of Beauty,” an abbreviation of the opening line of a 1976 poem dedicated to Baryshnikov by poet Joseph Brodsky, is the title of a new photography exhibition at Erarta Museum of Contemporary Art that consists of images of the dancer on stage. The photographs on show, which are exclusively images of Baryshnikov on stage, build up the story of his dance and theater career through the work of three prominent dance photographers who captured Baryshnikov during performances and rehearsals at different stages of his career. Art historian Irina Ivanchenko said at the exhibition opening that Baryshnikov’s main contribution to the art form was his demonstration of the potential of the human body, adding that he was also an innovator who had pushed new boundaries in dance when he unexpectedly left classical ballet in 1989 to become a modern dancer. “He was unique and without any competition the best performer of modernist choreography, [he] influenced the development of the American dance genre, far from classical ballet,” said Ivanchenko. Baryshnikov, heralded by New York Times critic Clive Barnes as “the most perfect dancer I have ever seen,” famously defected in 1974 while on tour in Canada with the Kirov Theater, as St. Petersburg’s Mariinsky Theater was known during the Soviet era. He sought political asylum in Toronto, and after announcing that he would never return to the U.S.S.R., has spent the rest of his career abroad, most famously spending 18 months as principal dancer at the New York City Ballet when it was run by the legendary choreographer George Balanchine. “Baryshnikov not only provided modernist choreographers [with] the opportunity to work with professional class [dancers] and revealed new horizons of creativity to them and aroused their imagination, but discovered through his performances the benefits of classical education for contemporary dancers. In this case — the benefits of the Russian classical school,” said Ivanchenko. The photos on show at Erarta were all taken by three photographers: Nina Alovert, who photographed ballet at the Kirov and Bolshoi Theaters in the 1950s before emigrating to the U.S. in 1977 and who is the author of Barysh- nikov’s biography; Paul Kolnik, the official photographer of the New York City Ballet for the last 30 years, who photographed Baryshnikov during his time at the company; and Maria Baranova, a fashion and dance photographer who has mostly photographed Baryshnikov’s recent work in various plays. The photos are different in epoch and style, but Baryshnikov’s phenomenal energy and brilliance are present in every image. The exhibition has been organized by the Open World Dance Foundation, a charity that encourages children who are interested in ballet to pursue their ambitions, and that counts Baryshnikov among its supporters. The foundation was set up with the goal of helping orphans to develop their creative talent and integrate into society through the arts and psychological care. “We do not set a goal to raise ballet stars; for us it is important to give children the opportunity to have a choice,” said founder Yekaterina Schyolkanova, a former soloist with the Kirov Ballet and the American Ballet Theater and a native of St. Petersburg. “We hope that children involved in dance will never fall into a criminal environment, as art changes people. Familiarity with ballet connects children to different kinds of art — theater, music and decorative art,” she said. maria baranova Nearly 40 years after Mikhail Baryshnikov’s defection, the city in which he once lived marks his 65th birthday. The images include ones of Baryshnikov in theater plays, such as ‘In Paris.’ Although the exhibition mainly features photographs of Baryshnikov in acting roles, they are just as energetic and striking as the images of him dancing in Roland Petit’s “Carmen” 30 years earlier. The show is proof of the words of ballet historian and critic Vadim Gayevsky, who wrote of Baryshnikov: “…What was really unique was his intellect, a mind that broke all barriers and could understand the logic of any choreographic structure. He wanted to do what he could not do, he wanted to try everything, and he was always successful. He flies through the dance, he is free.” “Ballet Is a Castle of Beauty” runs through Feb. 9 at Erarta Museum and Galleries of Contemporary Art, 2, 29th Liniya, Vasilyevsky Island. Tel. 324 0809. www.erarta.com Education & JobOpportunities advertising section Wednesday, January 23, 2013 10 wednesday, january 23, 2013 HOW TO USE THE LISTINGS: Dates and times are correct at the time of publication, but last-minute changes are not infrequent, so it’s best to check by contacting the venue. Addresses and telephone numbers can be found at www.sptimes.ru (or scan the QR code below). Unless otherwise stated, stage events start at 7 p.m. All stage shows and films are in Russian unless noted. Tchaikovsky based on Tolstoy’s novel. Alexandrinsky Theater, 8 p.m. Les Noces. Le Rossignol One-act ballets, set to music by Igor Stravinsky. Mariinsky Theater opera Cosi Fan Tutte Goetz Fischer (Germany) stages Mozart’s comic opera about a pair of friends who decide to test the fidelity of their fiancees by swapping partners and courting them in disguise. Rimsky-Korsakov Conservatory Theater PREMIERE! Billy Budd Benjamin Britten’s opera, based on Herman Melville’s novella about events on board HMS Bellipotent. Mikhailovsky Theater concert Chamber Music Bach, Handel, Schumann, Liszt. Cappella Chamber Music Kochneva House friday, january 25 ballet stages wednesday, january 23 ballet Swan Lake Tchaikovsky’s ever-popular ballet in four acts with a prologue about the tragic fate of a swan princess. Musical director and conductor – Valery Gergiev. Mariinsky Theater opera La Boheme Yury Alexandrov stages Puccini’s opera set in the Latin Quarter of Paris, tracing the interwoven romances of a poet-painter, musician and philosopher. St. Petersburg Opera Oedipus Rex Igor Stravinsky’s opera-oratorio based on Jean Cocteau’s libretto of Sophocles’s tragedy about a man destined to murder his father and marry his mother. Staged by Jonathan Miller. Musical director and conductor Valery Gergiev. Mariinsky Theater Concert Hall concert Chamber Music Brahms, Tchaikovsky, Rachmaninov, Franck, Poulenc. Museum of Music (Sheremetyev Palace), 34 Nab. Reki Fontanki, tel. 272 4441 Yury Kornakov Memorial Evening Marking the 75th anniversary of the composer’s birth. Shostakovich Philharmonic, Small Hall Chamber Music Purcell, Britten, Handel, Gluck. Kochneva House thursday, january 24 ballet Anna Karenina The Boris Eifman Theater performs a ballet to music by Pyotr Red Giselle The Boris Eifman Ballet Theater performs the tragic story of Russian ballerina Olga Spesivtseva, set to music by Bizet, Tchaikovsky and Schnittke. Alexandriinsky Theater, 8 p.m. Le Parc Angelin Preljocaj choreographs a sensuous ballet depicting amorous intrigue in three acts to music by Mozart. Sound compositions by Goran Vejvoda. Mariinsky Theater, 8 p.m. opera PREMIERE! Billy Budd Benjamin Britten’s opera, based on Herman Melville’s novella about events on board HMS Bellipotent. Mikhailovsky Theater concert Gala Concert Winter Evening. St. Petersburg Opera soloists. St. Petersburg Opera When We Were Students Marking the 150th anniversary of the St. Petersburg Conservatory. Tchaikovsky, Prokofiev, Miaskovsky, Petrov. St. Petersburg State Academic Symphony Orchestra. Shostakovich Philharmonic, Main Hall Pyotr Laul Piano Recital Mozart, Schumann, Schubert, Mendelssohn, Brahms, Chopin. Cappella, 7 p.m. Chamber Music Byrd, Dowland. Old music and poetry of the 16th century. Cappella, 7.30 p.m. Symphony Music Pärt, Bruckner. Mariinsky Theater Symphony Orchestra. Mariinsky Theater Concert Hall saturday, january 26 ballet Le Parc Angelin Preljocaj choreographs a sensuous ballet depicting amorous intrigue in three acts to music by Mozart. Sound compositions by Goran Vejvoda. Mariinsky Theater, 6 p.m. Giselle Adolphe Adam’s tragic ballet, staged by Nikolai Dolgushin, about the tragic consequences of one young peasant woman’s love for a member of the aristocracy. RimskyKorsakov Conservatory Theater opera Pagliacci Yury Alexandrov stages Ruggero Leoncavallo’s tragic opera about a jealous husband in a troupe of itinerant actors. St. Petersburg Opera PREMIERE! Billy Budd Benjamin Britten’s opera, based on Herman Melville’s novella about events on board HMS Bellipotent. Mikhailovsky Theater concert Vocal Music Tchaikovsky, Rimsky-Korsakov, Saint-Saens, Strauss, Verdi, Charpentier, Massenet, Gounod, Puccini. Mariinsky Theater Concert Hall In the Realm of the Glorious Saltan Rimsky-Korsakov. Extracts from The Tale of Tsar Saltan. Mariinsky Theater Symphony Orchestra. Mariinsky Theater Concert Hall Symphony Music Schumann, Tchaikovsky. St. Petersburg Philharmonic Orchestra. Shostakovich Philharmonic, Main Hall Choral Music Rachmaninov. Smolny Cathedral Chamber Choir. St. Isaac’s Cathedral, 4 St. Isaac’s Square, tel. 315 9732 Jazz-Ba-Rock Bach, Vivaldi, Pachelbel, Purcell. Original and modern versions. Divertissement String Quartet. Moscow Violinjazz Quartet. Shostakovich Philharmonic, Small Hall Symphony Music Tchaikovsky. Cappella Symphony Orchestra. Cappella sunday, january 27 ballet The Nutcracker Vasily Vainonen directs Tchaikovsky’s Christmas favorite based on E.T.A. Hoffmann’s tale. Mariinsky Theater Le Corsaire Marius Petipa’s ballet based on Byron’s tragic poem, featuring eclectic music by Cesare Pugni, Leo Delibes, Riccardo Drigo and Adolphe Adam. Mikhailovsky Theater, 1 p.m., 7 p.m. opera Cinderella Boris Asafiev’s children’s opera based on the tale by Charles Perrault. RimskyKorsakov Conservatory Theater, 5 p.m. Boris Godunov Yury Alexandrov directs Modest Mussorgsky’s opera based on Pushkin’s historical drama about guilt and power, using the first version of the many currently in use. St. Petersburg Opera Sadko Alexei Stepanyuk’s staging of RimskyKorsakov’s opera-bylina in seven scenes about a poor fisherman who falls in love with a sea princess. Mariinsky Theater, 11.30 a.m. Olga Vizavi AVIA, the re-formed perestroika avant-pop band, will reunite with Anton Adasinsky of the Derevo physical theater company (right), to perform at Kosmonavt on Friday, Jan. 25. Symphony Music Rachmaninov, Shostakovich. St. Petersburg Academic Symphony Orchestra. Shostakovich Philharmonic, Main Hall Chamber Music John Cage. John Cage Festival. Erarta Museum, 5 p.m. Concert and Lecture Cappella Choir and Symphony Orchestra. Cappella, 12 p.m. In the Realm of the Glorious Saltan Rimsky-Korsakov. Extracts from The Tale of Tsar Saltan. Mariinsky Theater Symphony Orchestra. Mariinsky Theater Concert Hall, 12 p.m. Concert and Lecture Cappella Choir and Symphony Orchestra. Cappella, 2 p.m. Vocal Music Russian romances. Museum of the History of St. Petersburg: Rumyantsev Mansion, 3 p.m. Choral Music Marking the anniversary of the lifting of the Siege of Leningrad. Smolny cathedral chamber choir. Sampsonievsky Cathedral, 3 p.m. Martin Münch Piano Recital Balakirev, Albeniz, Ravel, Munch. Shostakovich Philharmonic, Small Hall monday, january 28 concert Symphony Music Bruckner. Mariinsky Theater Symphony Orchestra. Conductor Valery Gergiev. Mariinsky Theater Concert Hall, 8 p.m. Chamber Music Concert. Participants of the 7th Crescendo Competition-2013 festival. Shostakovich Philharmonic, Small Hall THE DISH By Allison Geller T h e S t. P e t e r s b u r g T i m e s Those faced with the predicament of where to take vegetarian — or, even more dire, vegan — guests in the city, or who want to go out to dinner and still feel good about themselves, will be glad to find the new vegetarian café Ukrop (Russian for “dill”) on the map. Diners are also sure to appreciate the eatery’s hip eco-friendly aesthetic: Think tree house taken over by home makeover show. The cafe has two levels, with a coffee bar and seating area on the lower one, and another coffee bar and the main dining area on the top. Decorations include origami chandeliers, artistically rendered wall sculptures of dill plants, and floorto-ceiling bookshelves arrayed with clay pots, clocks, books and other well-curated knickknacks. The whimsical touches extend to the tables, which are separated from each other by high planters. On each table is a jar of coloring pencils, which, we were assured, are conscientiously sharpened each night before the next day of business. And don’t leave Ukrop without sticking your hands under the table — there you’ll find small pebbles, stones and even whole walnuts. Think of it as a raw, vegetarian, vegan, lactose-free hand massage. While the menu — in Russian only — is available on the café’s website, it does not fully correspond to the up-to-date menu at Ukrop itself. The only English words on the menu are those explaining the “vegan,” “raw,” “milk” and “spicy” symbols beside the dishes. The stereotype about Russia and borsh will never die if restaurants keep coming up with their own take on the classic beet soup. Ukrop’s otlichny(excellent) raw borsch (180 rubles, $6) translated into shreds of crispy, raw cabbage floating in a cold beet broth and sprinkled liberally with the herb most loved by Russians and after which the café is named: Dill. While the greasy, meaty taste that permeates most bouillon-based borsch was not missed, the dish didn’t pack much punch. The crunchy Olivier salad (220 rubles, $7.30), which featured raw mayonnaise and innovative cubes of sweet potato in place of the usual ham, was just as fresh, but also nothing to moon over. Our slightly bumbling but wellmeaning waiter brought out the main courses while our jaws were still working on all that roughage. The vegetable cutlets with tomato tartare (180 rubles, $6), were made from some indefinable mixture of ground up nuts and raw vegetables, resulting in a tan-flecked, light green patty. While the creamy pesto offered some encouragement, the cutlets were still reminiscent of something you would put in your pocket before a long bike ride. The ravioli with spinach, homemade cheese and pine nuts (260 rubles, $8.60) bore a close resemblance to fried wontons and were a pleasant surprise, garnished with a sweet sauce and a few leaves of arugula, and accompanied by a ramekin of sour cream. The raw concept also extends to most of Ukrop’s desserts. The pome- opera The Brothers Karamazov Vasily Barkhatov directs Alexander Smelkov’s opera in two acts based on the novel by Fyodor Dostoevsky. Mariinsky Theater concert Chamber Music War songs. Divertissement Chamber ensemble. Kochneva House, 2 p.m. Valeria Stenkina Vocal Recital (soprano) Glinka, Tchaikovsky, Rubinstein, Verdi, Giordano, Puccini, Massenet, Bizet. Shostakovich Philharmonic, Small Hall Symphony Music Paganini, Beethoven, Berlioz, Schumann, Rossini. St. Petersburg State Academy Orchestra. St. Petersburg Chamber Choir. Mikhailovsky Theater Choral Music Mozart. Cappella choirs and symphony orchestra. Cappella gigs wednesday, january 23 rock, etc. Motor Roller Rock. Dada, 47 Gorokhovaya Ulitsa. Tel. 983 7050. 8 p.m. Classic Rock Show Covers. Jagger, 2 Ploshchad Konstitutsii. Tel. 923 1292. 8:30 p.m. Andrei Knyazev Rock. Manhattan, 90 Naberezhnaya Reki Fontanki. Tel. 713 1945. 8 p.m. King Rock Fest 2013, Part 3 Acts t.b.c. Zal Ozhidaniya, 118 Naberezhnaya Obvodnogo Kanala. Tel. 333 1069. 6 p.m. Kuzma and VirtUOzy Punk, alternative. Zoccolo, 2/3 3-ya Sovetskaya Ulitsa. Tel. 274 9467. 8 p.m. jazz & blues Dilligent dining Ukrop 23 Ulitsa Marata Tel. 946 3036 Open daily 12 p.m. to 10 p.m. Menu in Russian only Dinner for two with a glass of wine 1,810 rubles ($60) tuesday, january 29 concert granate tart (220 rubles, $7.30) was appealingly presented, covered in fresh pomegranate seeds and plated with a dusting of cocoa powder. The other tart, a “striped cashew cake” (220 rubles, $7.30), was made up of tan, pink and brown layers. The flavor was not unlike that of the vegetable cutlet. A glass of German Klaus Langhoff white wine (180 rubles, $6), was as sweet as grape juice and served in a glass with a disturbing red stain, and the coffee (80 rubles, $2.60) was mediocre. Stick to the fresh juices and well-chosen tea list. Except for the ravioli, with their appealing chew and satisfying flavors, this is food that announces itself as vegetarian at first bite. Expect to feel surprisingly heavy after eating here, as if you had dined on dense, protein-packed energy bars. On the other hand, Ukrop certainly offers freshness, in both food and atmosphere. Even if it’s just for a coffee or a juice, it’s modestly priced and centrally located, and it’s good to know that something crisp, wholesome and full of fiber is only one recycled-paper menu away. 1900 Arseny Ivankovich, David Goloshchyokin and His Band. Jazz Philharmonic Hall, 27 Zagorodny Prospekt. Tel. 764 85 65, 764 9843. 7 p.m. Four & More Funk, electric jazz. JFC Jazz Club, 33 Shpalernaya Ulitsa. Tel. 272 9850. 8 p.m. thursday, january 24 rock, etc. King Tubby Birthday Concert Jungle Rock, Caribace Dub Club, OVRDBD. Dada, 47 Gorokhovaya Ulitsa. Tel. 983 7050. 7 p.m. Sny Afrikantsa Acoustic. Fish Fabrique (Nouvelle), 53 Ligovsky Prospekt. Tel. 764 4857. 9 p.m. Chestnoye Slovo / Valen’Time Rock. Manhattan, 90 Naberezhnaya Reki Fontanki. Tel. 713 1945. 8 p.m. Dilemma / Altavista / Ad Notam Pop rock. Zal Ozhidaniya, 118 Naberezhnaya Obvodnogo Kanala. Tel. 333 1069. 8 p.m. jazz & blues Homage to Charlie Mingus Grigory Voskoboinik Quartet. Jazz Philharmonic Hall, 27 Zagorodny Prospekt. Tel. 764 85 65, 764 9843. 7 p.m. Gaivoronsky Volkov Kondakov Art jazz. JFC Jazz Club, 33 Shpalernaya Ulitsa. Tel. 272 9850. 8 p.m. friday, january 25 rock, etc. Triada Hip-hop. Avrora Concert Hall, St. Petersburg Hotel, 5/2 Pirogovskaya Naberezhnaya. Tel. 907 1917. 7 p.m. Granny Smith Jazz, funk, R&B, pop. Dada, 47 Gorokhovaya Ulitsa. Tel. 983 7050. 7 p.m. wednesday, january 23, 2013 11 18 Plus Ska rock. Dusche, 50 Ligovsky Prospekt, Korpus 6. Tel. +7 (960) 246 4550. 8 p.m. Stilissimo feat. Rennie Pilgrem Breaks. Dusche, 50 Ligovsky Prospekt, Korpus 6. Tel. +7 (960) 246 4550. 11:55 p.m. Bondage Fairies / Hospital / Interdeer Electropunk, indie rock, alternative. Fish Fabrique (Nouvelle), 53 Ligovsky Prospekt. Tel. 764 4857. 9 p.m. Od1n / Conus Experimental, electronica, improvised. GEZ-21 (Gallery of Experimental Sound), 53 Ligovsky Prospekt. Tel. 764 52 58. 8 p.m. Electro Zombie Punk, alternative. Griboyedov, 2A Voronezhskaya Ulitsa. Tel. 764 4355, 973 7273. 9 p.m. AVIA / Positive Band Pop, rock, experimental. Kosmonavt, 24 Bronnitskaya Ulitsa. Tel. 922 1300. 8 p.m. Student Day Toch-v-Toch, Nas Net. Mod, 7 Naberezhnaya Kanala Griboyedova. Tel. 712 0734. 8 p.m. Ackee Mama / DiaPositive / Sergei Kuryanov Band Reggae. Vinyl Story, 2 Aptekarsky Pereulok. Tel. 334 1561. 8 p.m. Kukryniksy Pop rock. Zal Ozhidaniya, 118 Naberezhnaya Obvodnogo Kanala. Tel. 333 1069. 8 p.m. Nosebleed / Gorilla Troops / Distress / Foreseen Hardcore, crossover, thrash metal. Zoccolo, 2/3 3-ya Sovetskaya Ulitsa. Tel. 274 9467. 8 p.m. jazz & blues Elvira Trafova and Pyotr Kornev Band Romantic jazz night. Jazz Philharmonic Hall, 27 Zagorodny Prospekt. Tel. 764 85 65, 764 9843. 7 p.m. Easy Winners Ragtime Band Early traditional jazz. JFC Jazz Club, 33 Shpalernaya Ulitsa. Tel. 272 9850. 8 p.m. saturday, january 26 rock, etc. Markscheider Kunst Latin, Afro rock, reggae. Avrora Concert Hall, St. Petersburg Hotel, 5/2 Pirogovskaya Naberezhnaya. Tel. 907 1917. 7 p.m. Chyo Morale Balkan pop. Avrora Concert Hall (BB King Hall), St. Petersburg Hotel, 5/2 Pirogovskaya Naberezhnaya. Tel. 907 1917. 7 p.m. Komba BAKKh Reggae. Dada, 47 Gorokhovaya Ulitsa. Tel. 983 7050. 7 p.m. Drugly Cats Pop punk. Dusche, 50 Ligovsky Prospekt, Korpus 6. Tel. +7 (960) 246 4550. 8 p.m. Pony Indie rock. Fish Fabrique (Nouvelle), 53 Ligovsky Prospekt. Tel. 764 4857. 9 p.m. Harddrive Improvised, psychedelic rock. GEZ-21 (Gallery of Experimental Sound), 53 Ligovsky Prospekt. Tel. 764 52 58. 8 p.m. Post-Student Day Ghetto Girls, the Clones Project. Griboyedov, 2A Voronezhskaya Ulitsa. Tel. 764 4355, 973 7273. 9 p.m. Space Trees Rock. Manhattan, 90 Naberezhnaya Reki Fontanki. Tel. 713 1945. 8 p.m. Bitsikl Babskogo Reggae, ska, Latin. Money Honey, 28 Sadovaya Ulitsa. Tel. 310 0549. 7 p.m. Avgust Metal. Vinyl Story, 2 Aptekarsky Pereulok. Tel. 334 1561. 7 p.m. Mujuice Pop rock. Zal Ozhidaniya, 118 Naberezhnaya Obvodnogo Kanala. Tel. 333 1069. 8 p.m. Polyn / Sh.I.V.A. / Falling Down Rock, indie rock, alternative. Zoccolo, 2/3 3-ya Sovetskaya Ulitsa. Tel. 274 9467. 8 p.m. jazz & blues Leningrad Dixieland Band Jazz dancing. Jazz Philharmonic Hall, 27 Zagorodny Prospekt. Tel. 764 85 65, 764 9843. 7 p.m. Alexei Cheremizov Band Piano night. Jazz Philharmonic Hall (Ellington Hall), 27 Zagorodny Prospekt. Tel. 764 85 65, 764 9843. 8 p.m. Camaradas Salsa. JFC Jazz Club, 33 Shpalernaya Ulitsa. Tel. 272 9850. 8 p.m. Captain Flint. Vinyl Story, 2 Aptekarsky Pereulok. Tel. 334 1561. 6:30 p.m. Dima Kartashov Hip-hop. Zal Ozhidaniya, 118 Naberezhnaya Obvodnogo Kanala. Tel. 333 1069. 8 p.m. Da.Nk / Siam / Dochki-Materi Rock. Zoccolo, 2/3 3-ya Sovetskaya Ulitsa. Tel. 274 9467. 8 p.m. jazz & blues Alexander Latin Band Latin jazz. Jazz Philharmonic Hall, 27 Zagorodny Prospekt. Tel. 764 85 65, 764 9843. 7 p.m. Forrest Gump & Uncle Misha Blues. JFC Jazz Club, 33 Shpalernaya Ulitsa. Tel. 272 9850. 8 p.m. monday, january 28 rock, etc. Koshki Jam Acoustic. Manhattan, 90 Naberezhnaya Reki Fontanki. Tel. 713 1945. 8 p.m. Stea Funny Indie pop. Zoccolo, 2/3 3-ya Sovetskaya Ulitsa. Tel. 274 9467. 8 p.m. jazz & blues Svetamuzika Fusion. JFC Jazz Club, 33 Shpalernaya Ulitsa. Tel. 272 9850. 8 p.m. tuesday, january 29 rock, etc. Super-Offline Acts t.b.c. Dada, 47 Gorokhovaya Ulitsa. Tel. 983 7050. 7 p.m. Kvadrat Jazz Club Jam session. Griboyedov (Griboyedov Hill), 2A Voronezhskaya Ulitsa. Tel. 764 4355, 973 7273. 10 p.m. Plokhaya Muzyka / Sianuksvil / Polyot / Johnny Dilinger Rock, alternative. Zoccolo, 2/3 3-ya Sovetskaya Ulitsa. Tel. 274 9467. 8 p.m. jazz & blues Kvadrat Jazz Club Jam session. Jazz Philharmonic Hall (Ellington Hall), 27 Zagorodny Prospekt. Tel. 764 85 65, 764 9843. 8 p.m. Andrei Kondakov Band Original compositions. JFC Jazz Club, 33 Shpalernaya Ulitsa. Tel. 272 9850. 8 p.m. screens NEW! Anna Karenina (2012, U.K.) Joe Wright’s drama starring Keira Knightley and Jude Law. Avrora, Jam Hall, Khudozhestvenny, Mirage Cinema, Pik. Another Woman’s Life (La vie d’une autre) (2012, France-Luxembourg-Belgium) Sylvie Testud’s drama starring Juliette Binoche and Mathieu Kassovitz. Avrora, Dom Kino. NEW! Bollywood: The Greatest Love Story Ever Told (2011, India) Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra and Jeff Zimbalist’s documentary. Dom Kino. Cherry on the Cake (La cerise sur le gateau) (2012, France) Laura Morante’s comedy starring Laura Morante and Pascal Elbe. Dom Kino. The Double (Dublyor) (2012, Russia) Yevgeny Abyzov’s comedy starring Alexander Revva. Khudozhestvenny, Mirage Cinema, Pik. NEW! Gangster Squad (2013, U.S.) Ruben Fleischer’s crime film starring Sean Penn and Ryan Gosling. Mirage Cinema, Pik. Starts Jan. 24. Gentlemen, Good Luck! (Dzhentlmeny, Udachi!) (2012, Russia) Alexander Baranov and Dmitry Kiselyov’s comedy film starring Sergei Bezrukov, Gosha Kutsenko and Anton Bogdanov. Pik. Grave Encounters 2 (2012, Canada-U.S.) John Poliquin’s horror film starring Richard Harmon and Shawn C. Phillips. Khudozhestvenny. NEW! Great Expectations (2012, U.K.-U.S.) Mike Newell’s drama starring Helena Bonham Carter and Ralph Fiennes. Avrora, Mirage Cinema. Starts Jan. 24. NEW! Hansel and Gretel Witch Hunters (2013, U.S.) Tommy Wirkola’s actionadventure horror film starring Jeremy Renner and Gemma Arterton. Khudozhestvenny, Mirage Cinema, Neva, Pik. NEW! A Haunted House (2013, U.S.) Michael Tiddes’ comedy starring Marlon Wayans and Essence Atkins. Pik. The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey (2012, U.S.-New Zealand) Peter Jackson’s adventure fantasy film starring Martin Freeman and Ian McKellen. Pik. The Imposter (2012, U.K.) Bart Layton’s documentary about the 1997 case of the French confidence man Frederic Bourdin. Dom Kino. In the House (Dans La Maison) (2012, France) Francois Ozon’s thriller starring Fabrice Luchini and Ernst Umhauer. Dom Kino. NEW! Jack Reacher (2012, U.S.) Christopher McQuarrie’s crime thriller starring Tom Cruise. Jam Hall, Khudozhestvenny, Mirage Cinema, Neva, Pik. Life of Pi (2012, U.S.-China) Ang Lee’s adventure film starring Suraj Sharma, Irrfan Khan and Adil Hussain. Khudozhestvenny, Mirage Cinema, Pik. NEW! Lincoln (2012, U.S.) Steven Spielberg’s historical drama film starring Daniel Day-Lewis and Sally Field. Avrora, Mirage Cinema. Starts Jan. 24. NEW! Metro (2013, Russia) Anton Megerdichev’s thriller starring Sergei Puskepalis. Mirage Cinema. Starts Jan. 24. Movie 43 (2013, U.S.) Elizabeth Banks and Steven Brill’s comedy starring Emma Stone. Dom Kino, Khudozhestvenny, Pik. NEW! Parental Guidance (2012, U.S.) Andy Fickman’s comedy starring Billy Crystal and Bette Midler. Avrora, Khudozhestvenny, Mirage Cinema, Neva, Pik. NEW! Parker (2013, U.S.) Taylor Hackford’s thriller starring Jason Statham and Jennifer Lopez. Mirage Cinema. Starts Jan. 24. Delhi Dance (Tanets Deli) (2012, Russia) Ivan Vyrypayev’s drama starring Karolina Gruszka. Dom Kino. Pulp Fiction (1994, U.S.) Quentin Tarantino’s crime film starring John Travolta and Uma Thurman. Khudozhestvenny, Rodina. NEW! Django Unchained (2012, U.S.) Quentin Tarantino’s western starring Jamie Foxx and Christoph Waltz. Avrora, Jam Hall, Khudozhestvenny, Mirage Cinema, Neva, Pik. NEW! Rust and Bone (De rouille et d’os) (2012, France-Belgium) Jacques Audiard’s drama starring Marion Cotillard. Avrora. Starts Jan. 24. sunday, january 27 So Undercover (2012, U.S.) Tom Vaughan’s action-comedy film starring Alexis Knapp and Miley Cyrus. Pik. Superstar (2012, France-Belgium) Xavier Giannoli’s comedy starring Kad Merad and Cecile de France. Dom Kino. NEW! Toy Seller (Prodavets Igrushek) (2012, Russia) Yury Vasiliev’s comedy starring Shamil Khamatov, Agnes Chadova and Tatiana Lyutaeva. Khudozhestvenny, Rodina. NEW! Ticket to Vegas (Bilet na Vegas) (2012, Russia-U.S.) Gor Kirakosian’s comedy starring Mikhail Galustyan. Dom Kino, Mirage Cinema. Starts Jan. 24. museums ACADEMY OF ARTS MUSEUM 17 Universitetskaya Nab. Tel. 323 6496, 323 3578 M: Vasileostrovskaya. Wednesday through Sunday, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Konstantin Rudakov. Graphics. December 20 through January 27 Flower Crosses: Galina Rozhdestvenskaya. Painting. January 12 through February 10 ANNA AKHMATOVA MUSEUM AT THE FOUNTAIN HOUSE 34 Fontanka River, entrance from 53 Liteiny Pr. M: Gostiny Dvor, Mayakovskaya. Tel. 272 2211. Daily, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Closed Monday; 1 p.m. to 8 p.m. on the last Wednesday of every month. www.akhmatova.spb.ru Reading Group. Part of the Christmas at Fountain House cycle. December 21 through February 3 Painting and Graphics from the Collection of Nikolai Blagodatov. Paintings, graphics. January 15 through January 27 NEW! Alideza Naderi (Iran). Painting. January 29 through February 12 ARTILLERY MUSEUM (Military Historical Museum of Artillery and Engineers) 7 Alexandrovsky Park, M: Gorkovskaya. Tel. 232 0296, 610 3301. Wednesday through Sunday, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Closed last Thursday of each month. Most August Feldzeugmeister. Dedicated to Grand Prince Mikhail Nikolaevich (18321909). Uniforms, medals, photo, furniture, weapons, paintings, graphics. November 16 through February 28, 2013 European Hunting and Hunting Weapons in the 16th to 18th Centuries. Rifles, pistols and other weapons, engravings, taxidermy. September 8 through January 31, 2013. rock, etc. On-The-Go Indie pop. Dada, 47 Gorokhovaya Ulitsa. Tel. 983 7050. 7 p.m. Plyazh Pop punk. Dusche, 50 Ligovsky Prospekt, Korpus 6. Tel. +7 (960) 246 4550. 8 p.m. Alexei Nadzharov Improvised, electroacoustic, jam. GEZ-21 (Gallery of Experimental Sound), 53 Ligovsky Prospekt. Tel. 764 52 58. 8 p.m. Diskoteka Avariya Pop. Kosmonavt, 24 Bronnitskaya Ulitsa. Tel. 922 1300. 8 p.m. What For? Rock. Manhattan, 90 Naberezhnaya Reki Fontanki. Tel. 713 1945. 8 p.m. Stary Gnom Hip-hop. Mod, 7 Naberezhnaya Kanala Griboyedova. Tel. 712 0734. 7 p.m. Music With No Borders Arthouse Hours, Kamni, Bearded Birds, Bone Machinist, for spt Paintings and drawings by Yelena Kiseleva are on show through Feb. 3 at the Small Hall of the Nonconformist Art Museum, part of the Pushkinskaya 10 art center, in an exhibition of the artist’s work titled ‘The Portrait. Metamorphosis of the Genre.’ Zal Ozhidaniya Fronted by singer and guitarist Roman Litvinov (pictured), Mujuice, the Moscow band that combines indie rock and club electronica, will perform at Zal Ozhidaniya on Saturday, Jan. 26. ALEXANDER BLOK APARTMENT MUSEUM 57 Ul. Dekabristov, M: Sadovaya, Sennaya Ploshchad. Tel. 713 8631. Daily, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Closed Wednesday. Silence Blossoms Here... Blok’s St. Petersburg. Photos and postcards from the beginning of the 20th century from the museum’s collection. November 27 through April 24 ISAAK BRODSKY APARTMENT MUSEUM 3 Pl. Iskusstv. M: Nevsky Prospekt. Tel 314 3658. Wednesday through Sunday, 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. CHALIAPIN MANSION AND MUSEUM OF RUSSIAN OPERA 26 Ulitsa Graftio, M: Petrogradskaya. Tel. 234 1056. Open Wednesday to Sunday, 12 p.m. to 6 p.m. DECORATIVE AND APPLIED ARTS MUSEUM 13 Solyanoi Pereulok. M: Nevsky Prospekt, Chernyshevskaya. Tel. 273 3258. Tuesday through Saturday, 11 a.m. to 4.30 p.m. DERZHAVIN MUSEUM 118 Nab. Reki Fontanki. M: Tekhnologichesky Institut, Sennaya Ploshchad. Tel. 713 0717. Tuesday to Sunday, 10.30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Vy Pomnite, Tekla Za Ratyu Rat... Dedicated to the War of 1812. Graphics, objects, painting. November 16 through February 15 NEW! Miniatures From Private Collections. Sculpture. January 23 through February 28 DOLL MUSEUM 8 Kamskaya Ulitsa, M: Vasileostrovskaya. Tel. 327 7224. Daily, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Master classes in making dolls are held on Saturdays at 10 a.m. www.museumdolls.ru NEW! Textile Harmony. Decorative art. January 21 through March 3 DOSTOEVSKY APARTMENT MUSEUM 5/2 Kuznechny Pereulok, M: Vladimirskaya. Tel. 571 4031. Tuesday to Sunday, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. www.md.spb.ru. Reflected Dostoyevsky City: Tatyana Rebriyeva. Photo. January 15 through January 29 HEROIC DEFENDERS OF LENINGRAD MUSEUM MONUMENT Ploshchad Pobedy. M: Moskovskaya. Tel. 371 2951, 373 6563. Open 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. (5 p.m. on Tuesday and Friday). Closed Wednesday and the last Tuesday of every month. HISTORY OF PHOTOGRAPHY MUSEUM 23 Professora Popova Ul. Tel. 346 1850. Tuesday through Saturday, 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. www.photohismus.spb.ru NEW! Photographer of the Silver Age. Photos by the artist Alfred Eberling. January 25 through March 12 HISTORY OF RELIGION MUSEUM 14/5 Pochtamtskaya Ulitsa. M: Nevsky Prospekt / Sennaya Ploshchad, Sadovaya. 12 wednesday, january 23, 2013 Sentimental Journey. Wedgwood in Russia. Faience and porcelain from England. December 8 through March 31 Hugo van der Goes: Adoration of the Magi triptych. To celebrate the painting’s recent restoration. December 8 through January 27 A Wonderful Collection of Precious Books. 250 years of the Hermitage Library. Books. December 8 through March 10 An Artist of All Schools. Christian Wilhelm Dietrich (1712-1774). Painting, graphics. November 28 through February 24 Russian imperial porcelain from the second half of the 18th century. From the Christmas Gift series. December 2 through March 31 for spt Yevgeny Orlov’s ‘Movement on a Ladder’ is one of the images on show at the Manezh Central Exhibition Hall through Jan. 26 in a show titled ‘Petersburg. 20 Years.’ Tel. 571 0495, 314 5838. Daily 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Closed Wednesday. HISTORY OF ST. PETERSBURG MUSEUM Peter and Paul Fortress. M: Gorkovskaya. Tel. 230 6431. Daily, 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. (6 p.m. Tuesday). Closed Wednesday. www.spbmuseum.ru. All Russia Remembers. Monuments to the War of 1812 in St. Petersburg. Architectural models, models of monuments, painting, graphics, numismatics. November 29 through March 31 New Year Stories. Postcards from the prerevolutionary and Soviet periods from the museum’s collection, painting, graphics, photo. December 3 through March 10 HISTORY OF ST. PETERSBURG MUSEUM: MUSEUM OF PRINTING 32 Naberezhnaya Reki Moiki. Tel. 312 0977. Daily 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. (5 p.m. Friday). Closed Wednesday. HISTORY OF ST. PETERSBURG MUSEUM: RUMYANTSEV MANSION 44 Angliiskaya Naberezhnaya. M: Vasileostrovskaya, Nevsky Prospekt. Tel. 571 7544. Daily, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. (5 p.m. Tuesday). Closed Wednesday and the last Tuesday of each month. www.spbmuseum.ru The Collection of the Dukes of Mecklenburg. Engravings showing views of Western Europe, books. November 15 through May 19 Society of Traveling Exhibitions. 21st Century. Exhibition No. 46. Painting, graphics and sculpture from Russia, Belarus, Germany, Poland, Ukraine and Finland. December 26 through February 22 KIROV APARTMENT MUSEUM 26/28 Kamennoostrovsky Prospekt. M: Gorkovskaya, Petrogradskaya. Tel. 346 0217. Daily, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Closed Wednesday. KUNSTKAMERA 3 Universitetskaya Nab. Tel. 328 1412. Daily, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Closed Monday and the last Thursday of each month. www.kunstkamera.ru MATYUSHIN MUSEUM OF THE ST. PETERSBURG AVANT-GARDE 10 Ul. Professora Popova. M: Petrogradskaya. Daily, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m., (5 p.m. Tuesday). Closed Wednesday. www.spbmuseum.ru Samozveri. Children’s books and toys of the Russian avant-garde, from private collections. September 3 through January 31, 2013. The Three+ Alexander Maslov, Grigory Molchanov, Alexei Gostintsev and others. Painting. November 22 through January 31 MUSIC MUSEUM AT THE SHEREMETYEV PALACE 34 Nab. Reki. Fontanki. Tel. 272 4441. Open Wednesday to Sunday, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. NIKOLAI NEKRASOV APARTMENT MUSEUM 36 Liteiny Prospekt. M: Chernyshevskaya. Tel. 272 0165. Daily 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Closed Tuesday and the last Friday of every month. ADVERTISING Folk show at the nikolaevsky palace +7 812 312 55 00 www.folkshow.ru VLADIMIR NABOKOV APARTMENT MUSEUM 47 Bolshaya Morskaya. Tel. 315 4713, 717 4502. Daily, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. (12 p.m. to 5 p.m. at weekends). Closed Monday. www. nabokovmuseum.org Presentiment: Andrei Borichevsky. Photo. January 16 through February 8 POLITICAL HISTORY OF RUSSIA MUSEUM 2/4 Ulitsa Kuibysheva. M: Gorkovskaya. Tel. 233 7052. Daily, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Closed Thursday and the last Monday of the month. www.polithistory.ru Beyond the Realm of the Possible. Paintings, sculpture and installations by U.S. war veterans from the collection of the National Museum of Veterans’ Art in Chicago. December 14 through January 31, 2013. NEW! Poets Tread a Knife Edge. Dedicated to the 75th anniversary of Vladimir Vysotsky’s birth. Objects, photo. January 25 through February 13 POLITICAL POLICE MUSEUM 6 Admiralteisky Prospekt. M: Gostiny Dvor, Nevsky Prospekt. Tel. 312 2742. Monday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 5.30 p.m. POPOV CENTRAL MUSEUM OF COMMUNICATIONS 3 Pochtamtsky Pereulok. Tel. 323 9718. Tuesday through Saturday, 10.30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Closed the last Thursday of each month. www. rustelecom-museum.ru PUSHKIN APARTMENT MUSEUM 12 Nab. Reki Moika. Tel. 571 3801. Daily 11 a.m. to 5.30 p.m. Closed Tuesday. RIMSKY-KORSAKOV APARTMENT MUSEUM 28 Zagorodny Prospekt, Courtyard. M: Dostoyevskaya. Tel. 713 3208, 315 3975. Wednesday through Sunday, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Closed last Friday of each month. NIKOLAI ROERICH APARTMENT MUSEUM 1 Line 18, V.O. Wednesday through Sunday, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tel. 325 4413. www.roerich.spb.ru The Charms of Finland. Nikolai Roerich and Finnish cultural figures. Objects. November 23 through April 24 Secrets of the Gobi Desert. Field investigations from the part of the Gobi desert visited by the Roerich expedition. December 21 through February 24 RUSSIAN ETHNOGRAPHIC MUSEUM 4/1 Inzhenernaya Ul. M: Nevsky Prospekt. Tel. 313 4421. Daily, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Closed Monday and the last Friday of each month. Gavriil Vashenko. Painting. December 21 through January 30 URBAN SCULPTURE MUSEUM. NEW EXHIBITION HALL 179 Nevsky Prospekt. Entrance through 2 Chernoretsky Pereulok. Tel. 274 3860. Daily, 12 p.m. to 7 p.m. Closed Thursday, Friday. www.gmgs.ru SIEGE AND DEFENSE OF LENINGRAD MUSEUM 8 Solyanoi Pereulok. Tel. 275 7208. Daily 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., (3 p.m. Tuesday). Closed Wednesday and the last Thursday of every month. STATE HERMITAGE MUSEUM 1 Palace Square. M: Nevsky Prospekt. Tel. 571 3420, 571 3465. Daily, 10.30 a.m. to 6 p.m. (9 p.m. Saturday). Closed Monday. www.hermitagemuseum.org The Storm of 1812. Painting, graphics, sculpture depicting the war of 1812 from the State Hermitage’s collection. December 26 through April 7 NEW! Toy Soldiers. From December 26. Closing date to be confirmed We All Merge into a Single Soul... The war of 1812 in medals. December 26 through April 7 STATE HERMITAGE MUSEUM: MENSHIKOV PALACE 15 Universitetskaya Nab. M: Vasileostrovskaya. Tel. 323 1112. Daily, 10.30 a.m. to 6 p.m. (5 p.m. Sunday). Closed Monday. STATE RUSSIAN MUSEUM 2 Inzhenernaya Ul. M: Nevsky Prospekt. Tel. 314 3448, 595 4248. Open 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. (5 p.m. Monday). 1 p.m. to 9 p.m on Thursdays. Closed Tuesday. www.rusmuseum.ru/eng No Barriers. Russian Art 1985-2000. Zurab Tsereteli, Gely Korzhev, Konstantin Zvezdochyotov and others. Sculpture, graphics. Painting. December 5 through February 3 STATE RUSSIAN MUSEUM: MARBLE PALACE 5/1 Millionnaya Ul. M: Nevsky Prospekt. Tel. 312 9196. Open 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. (5 p.m. Monday). 1 p.m. to 9 p.m on Thursdays. Closed Tuesday. A branch of the State Russian Museum. Resonant Matter. Objects, video art, sound installation, sculpture, performance. December 20 through March 11 STATE RUSSIAN MUSEUM: MIKHAILOVSKY (ENGINEERS’) CASTLE 2 Sadovaya Ulitsa. M: Nevsky Prospekt. Tel. 313 4112. Open 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. (5 p.m. Monday). 1 p.m. to 9 p.m on Thursdays. Closed Tuesday. A branch of the State Russian Museum. Dreams as Reality. Painting, sculpture and graphics of the 17th – early 21st century from the museum’s collection. November 28 through January 27 STATE RUSSIAN MUSEUM: STROGANOV PALACE 17 Nevsky Prospekt. Tel. 571 2360. Open 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. (5 p.m. Monday). 1 p.m. to 9 p.m on Thursdays. Closed Tuesday. A branch of the State Russian Museum. The Territory of Silence: Pyotr Dik. Painting. November 22 through February 11 YELAGIN ISLAND PALACE AND MUSEUM OF 18TH-20TH CENTURY DECORATIVE AND APPLIED ARTS 1 Yelagin Island, M: Krestovsky Island, Chernaya Rechka. Tel. 430 1131. Tuesday through Sunday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. NEW! Steps art group. Painting, graphics. January 20 through February 23 When Magicians Come to People. Objects. November 20 through January 31 YUSUPOVSKY PALACE 94 Nab. Reki. Moiki. M: Sennaya Ploshchad, Sadovaya. Tel. 314 9883. Daily, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. http://yusupov-palace.ru BOREY 58 Liteiny Prospekt. M: Vladimirskaya, Mayakovskaya. Tel. 275 3837. Tuesday – Saturday 12 p.m. to 8 p.m. www.borey.ru Photographika. Photo, graphics. January 15 through January 26 DIDI ART GALLERY 62 Bolshoi Prospekt of V.O., M: Vasileostrovskaya. Tel. 320 7357. Daily 12 p.m. to 8 p.m. Saturday, Sunday 12 p.m. to 7 p.m. http://didigallery.com Yelena Schumacher. Painting. December 21 through January 29 ERARTA MUSEUM 2, 29th Line of Vasilyevsky Island, lit. A. M: Vasileostrovskaya. Tel. 324 0809. Daily 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Closed Tuesday. www.erarta.com Crosses. Painting, graphics, sculpture, installations and video art. January 18 through February 4 Ballet Is a Castle of Beauty. Nina Alovert, Paul Kolnik (both – U.S.), Maria Baranova. Dedicated to Mikhail Baryshnikov. Photo. January 16 through February 11 NEW! Soviet Pin-Up: Valery Barykin. Posters. January 24 through February 25 GLASS GALLERY 1/28 Ul. Lomonosova, M: Gostiny Dvor. Tel. 312 2214. Daily 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Game of Beads: Konstantin Chmutin. Graphics. January 15 through February 4 KVADRAT 28 Ulitsa Kuibysheva, M: Gorkovskaya. Tel. +7 963 315 6937. Wednesday through Saturday, 2 p.m. to 7 p.m. www.4tgallery.ru Everyday Experiences. Painting, graphics, video. December 21 through February 1 LEMONADE GALLERY 9 Ulitsa Belinskogo, attic. M: Gostiny Dvor, Mayakovskaya. Tel. +7 921 654 8954, +7 904 615 5916. Open Monday – Thursday 2 p.m. to 10.30 p.m. (from noon at weekends). www.vk.com/lemonaderoof LOFT-PROJECT ETAGI 74 Ligovsky Prospekt. Tel. 458 5005. Daily 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Gradographics. Graphics, video art. December 20 through February 16 NEW! Fencers: Pavel Zmunchila. Photo. January 24 through April 25 100 Years Under a Red Sun. Photo. December 11 through March 11 Hot Cold. Painting, photo, graphics, video art, sculpture, objects. December 22 through February 15 Formula Gallery. Promgraphics: Mark Petrov. Tel. 458 5005. Graphics. December 26 through March 27 MANEZH CENTRAL EXHIBITION HALL 1 St. Isaac’s Square. Tel. 314 8859. Open daily, 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. www.manege.spb.ru Petersburg. 20 Years. Mikhail Anikushin, Konstantin Simun, Zaven Arshakuni and others. Painting, graphics, photo, sculpture. January 13 through January 26 MART GALLERY 35 Ul. Marata. Tel. 710 8835, 315 2738. M: Vladimirskaya, Dostoyevskaya. Daily 12 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday 12 a.m. – 6 p.m. Closed Sunday, Monday. www.martgallery.ru Gallery Artists. Painting. December 20 through January 26 NEW! The Wizard’s Hat: Anna Soluyanova. Painting. January 30 through February 2 NEW MUSEUM GALLERY 29 6th Line of Vasilyevsky Island. Tel. 323 5090. M: Vasileostrovskaya. Wednesday to Sunday, 12 p.m. to 7 p.m. www.novymuseum.ru Point of View: Vitaly Pushnitsky. Sculpture, painting, postcards. December 7 through February 3 PERINNIYE RYADY ART CENTER 4 Dumskaya Ulitsa. M: Gostiny Dvor. Daily 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Tel. +7 904 601 0000. www.artcenter.su 100 Wonders of the World. Gold collection 2012. Photo. December 13 through March 3 PUSHKINSKAYA 10 ART CENTER Galleries open from 4 p.m. through 8 p.m. Closed Mondays and Tuesdays. Entrance at 53 Ligovsky Prospekt. Tel: 764 5371 http://en.p-10.ru/ The Door. Posturbanism: Alexei Parygin. Floor 3. Photo. January 12 through February 3 GEZ-21 Outbuilding B, 3 Floor. Tel. 764 5258, Daily 3 p.m. to midnight. Navicula Artis gallery. Man-Sticker: Alexei ‘Fanat’ Shlyakov. Tel. 764 5371. Installation. January 12 through February 3 New Academy of Fine Arts Museum. Room 405. Tel. 272 8222. Saturday 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. Nonconformist Art Museum. The White Movement: Igor Shirshkov. Floor 4. Tel. 764 5371. Wednesday through Sunday 3 p.m. to 7 p.m. www.nonmuseum.ru. Paintings, graphics. January 12 through February 3 Parnik Art-Project. Inside Out: Olga Dospekhova. Installation. January 12 through February 3 RACHMANINOV GARDEN 5 Kazanskaya Ul. Tel. 312 9558. Tuesday to Saturday, 12 p.m. to 8 p.m. http://fotorachmaninov.ru Face Control: Alexander Pilko. Photo. January 15 through March 2 RACHMANINOV HOTEL 5 Kazanskaya Ul. Tel. 327 7466. www.kazansky5.com NEW! Ballet Is a Castle of Beauty. Part of the ‘Days of Baryshnikov’ festival devoted to the dancer Mikhail Baryshnikov. Photo. January 20 through March 4 RIZZORDI ART FOUNDATION 49a Kurlyandskaya Ulitsa. M: Baltiiskaya. Tuesday through Friday, 2 p.m. – 8. p.m., Sunday 12 p.m. – 7 p.m. Closed on Mondays. Tel. 702 9062. www.rizzordi.org. Between Land and Sky. AES+F art group, Valery Kazas, Irina Drozd and others. Painting, graphics, photo, installation, video art. December 6 through January 31 ROSPHOTO STATE CENTER OF PHOTOGRAPHY 35 Bolshaya Morskaya Ulitsa. Tel. 314 6184, 314 1214. Daily, 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. www.rosfoto.org Vladimir Antoshenkov. Photo. December 6 through February 3 Stone Garden: David Goberman. Photo. December 27 through January 27 DMITRY SEMENOV GALLERY 63 Ligovsky Prospekt, apartment 19. Daily 12 p.m. to 8 p.m. Closed Sunday, Monday. Tel. 575 8323, +7 911 998 6673. Alexander Bartov: ‘From the Life of Trees’ and ‘Mirages of Iceland.’ Painting, graphics. December 21 through January 31 galleries ANNA NOVA 28 Ulitsa Zhukovskogo, tel. 275 9762. Tuesday-Saturday 12 p.m. to 7 p.m. www.annanova-gallery.ru Reconstructor: Denis Patrakeyev. Painting, installation, video art. December 21 through February 9 ARTISTS UNION OF RUSSIA EXHIBITION CENTER 38 Bolshaya Morskaya Ulitsa. Tel. 314 3060. Daily, 12 p.m. to 7 p.m. Closed on Monday. www.spb-uniart.ru From Petersburg to Vyborg: Vladimir Kolbasov. Painting. January 15 through January 27 NEW! Ivan Chernyakevich. Silk painting. January 22 through January 27 NEW! Anatoly Kurshin. Painting, graphics. January 22 through January 27 BOOK AND GRAPHICS CENTER 55 Liteiny Prospekt. M: Mayakovskaya. Tel. 273 5452. Daily 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. www.naiv-art.ru NEW! Dmitry Burago. Painting. January 23 through February 3 for spt St. Petersburg’s infamous Kresty detention center is the subject of a new exhibition at Erarta Museum and Galleries of Modern Art that runs through Feb. 4. online Tell the world about your business by advertising in the RealEstate Real Estate Wednesday, January 23, 2013 For additional information, call Elena Evstafieva at (812) 325-6080. E-mail: [email protected] advertising section 2-room apartment 10 Liteiny Pr. Modern spacious apartment with sauna, total area 100 sq.m., in a quiet gated courtyard, fully fitted and furnished. For details contact Olga, tel.: +7-921963-74-54; e-mail: olestate@gmail. com, [email protected] 2nd Line Vasilyevsky Island Modern style 2-room apartment in a new building situated on Vasilyevsky island, original design, 24/7 concierge, secured parking, just a few minutes’ walk from M. Vasileostrovskaya. NIGHT SKY REALTY. Tel.: +7-812-333-1515. E-mail: [email protected] 40 Moika Emb. Newly renovated furnished apartment, 90 sq.m. on 2 levels, architect’s design, 1 bedroom, living room, modern fully fitted kitchen, view over the river, entrance with intercom system. For details contact Olga. Tel.: +7-921-963-74-54; E-mail: [email protected], olga@ ctinvestments.ru 11 Moika Emb. Superb central location, fully reconstructed historic building, 1 bedroom apartment, high-quality renovation, splendid view over Moika River and the Church of Resurrection, air conditioning, Internet, satellite TV, intercom, 24/7 security guards, underground parking. NIGHT SKY REALTY Tel.: +7-812-333-15-15. E-mail: [email protected] 3-room apartment 5 Kazanskaya Ul. Spacious, modern 3-bedroom apartment. European standard, two bathrooms, fully fitted kitchen, furnished, perfect entrance. For details contact Olga, tel.: +7-921-963-74-54; +7(812)325-3838 +7(921)992-1522 Prize-winner of “Caissa-2008-2012” real estate contests Property rent & sales +7-812-493-23-40, +7-921-963-74-54 www.ctinvestments.ru e-mail: [email protected], olga@ ctinvestments.ru e-mail: [email protected], olga@ ctinvestments.ru 10 Pushkinskaya Ul. Recently renovated stylish apartment, total area 120 sq.m. in a reconstructed building with concierge and parking, furnished, fitted. For details contact Olga. Tel.: +7-921-963-74-54; E-mail: [email protected], olga@ ctinvestments.ru 3 Malaya Sadovaya Ul. Perfect location in historic center, tastefully renovated 2-bedroom apartment, modern interiors, full set of furniture and household equipment, air conditioning, Internet, Satellite TV. NIGHT SKY REALTY. Tel.: +7-812-333-15-15. E-mail: [email protected] Moika Emb. Apartment near Nevsky Pr. Top floor apartment, total area 100 sq.m., 2 bedrooms, living room, fully fitted kitchen, 2 bathrooms, view of Moika Emb., concierge. For details contact Olga, tel.: +7-921-963-74-54; e-mail: [email protected], olga@ ctinvestments.ru 64 Moika Emb. Apartment near St. Isaac’s Square. European-style renovation, 2 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, modern fitted kitchen, furnished, safe entrance with concierge, Internet, satellite. For details contact Olga, tel.: +7-921-963-74-54; 4-room apartment 58 Kazanskaya Ul. Brand new 4-room apartment in an elite residential building in the city center, first time rent, fully furnished and equipped, spacious terrace, 24/7 guards, underground parking. NIGHT SKY REALTY. Tel.: +7-812-333-15-15. E-mail: [email protected] 100 Moika Emb. Total area: 220 sq.m. Overlooks Moika Emb., has a terrace, 3 bathrooms, fully fitted kitchen, secure entrance with concierge, parking. For details contact Olga. Tel.: +7-921-96374-54; e-mail: [email protected], [email protected] 5-room apartment Millionnaya Ul. Apartment near the Hermitage. Total area: 270 sq.m. Modern design, secure entrance with concierge, fitted kitchen, unfurnished, balcony, parking. For details contact Olga. Tel.: +7-921-963-74-54; e-mail: olestate@ gmail.com, [email protected] Apartment for sale 19 Karpovka river emb. M. Petrogradskaya. Elite building. 3rd floor (lift). Total area 358 sq.m. Ten rooms. Wonderful river view. Tel.: +7-812-325-3838, +7-921-992-1522 NEVSKY PROSTOR AGENCY, E-mail: – Banquet hall; – Breakfast; – Children’s room; – Credit cards accepted; – Dancefloor; – Live music; – Home delivery; Average price of a two-course meal with an alcoholic beverage: $ – 500 to 1,000 rubles; $$ – 1,000 to 1,500 rubles; $$$ – more than 1,500 rubles – Non-smoking area; [email protected], com. www.spb-estate. 21 Millionnaya Ul. Close to the Hermitage. 2nd floor. Total area 87 sq.m. Renovated, fully furnished and equipped 2-bedroom apartment. Windows overlook Millionnaya street and courtyard. Wide refurbished staircase. 12,000,000 rub. Tel.: +7-812325-3838, +7-921-992-1522, NEVSKY PROSTOR AGENCY, E-mail: [email protected], www.spb-estate.com. Accommodation Apartments and hotels. Tel. : +7-812-57999-33. E-mail: [email protected] www. travelrussia.su Find more information on our website WWW.SPTIMES.RU – Parking; – Wi-Fi zone. Tell the world about your business by advertising in Classifieds Legal services Language exchange Услуги правового и юридического характера, в том числе представительство в судах общей юрисдикции, Арбитраж, любая сложность и стадия рассмотрения. Тел.: +7-911-170-06-03 Russian to English. Tel.: +7-911-170-19-55, e-mail: [email protected], Marina Cleaning, washing up, ironing. E-mail: [email protected] Guides Massage Professional guide / driver with a car. www. guide-petersburg.com. Tel.: +7-812-93457-84. Gennady Erotic, classical massage. Anastasia. Tel.: +7-921-910-49-12 Guided tours. Museums. Tel. : +7-812-57999-33. E-mail: [email protected] www. travelrussia.su Interior Services Furniture repair. Furnish apartments. E-mail: [email protected] Taxi +79-ANGEL-TAXI www.Angel-Taxi.com All kinds of massage. Liza. +7-911-720-99-19 Sensual and erotic massage. Tel.: +7-965787-56-09 Nataly Erotic and relaxing massage. Tel.: +7-911922-97-37, Katyusha Erotic, urological, classical and other kinds of massage. No sex. 12 Goncharnaya Ul. (M. Vosstaniya Sq.). Tel.: +7-921-645-66-01, Sofia. Erotic, soap, Japanese, Thai, underwater massage, VIP area, 2 saunas, swimming pool. Tel.: 764-78-69, 764-54-49. Kuznechny Per. 14 A (5-min. walk along Marata Ul. from Nevsky Pr.). Website: www. spa-orchid.ru Language lessons Native English Teacher. Cambridge / MBA. Individuals / Groups. Highly experienced professional. Tel.: +7-931-322-06-13 Classifieds Wednesday, January 23, 2013 travel guide For additional information, call Elena Evstafieva at (812) 325-6080. E-mail: [email protected] advertising section moving/relocation Spa salon Your choice for: International, domestic, local moving Erotic massage salon St. Petersburg Tourist Information Bureau Church services Church of England. English services in St. Petersburg. 11 a.m., Sunday. St. Catherine’s Church. Next to the Consulate General of Sweden. Malaya Konushennaya Ulitsa. Tel.:+7-921-323-54-81. Domestic Services online Marriage agencies Russian lessons. Individual approach. Flexible schedule. www.ruslearn.com Fortuna. Best ladies in St. Petersburg. Tel.: +7-812-571-76-72, +7-911-765-40-46, E-mail: [email protected] www. fortuna.spb.ru/v2 Visas REGISTRATION REGISTRATION OF AUSTRALIANS ALL AUSTRALIANS TRAVELING OVERSEAS are encouraged to register on http://smartraveller.gov.au, or call (495) 232-3253. The information you provide will help us find you in an emergency, whether it is a natural disaster, civil disturbance or family emergency. – Australian Embassy in Moscow. Information pavilions: • Pulkovo airports (1 and 2) • Marine Facade (Seaport) • Palace Square • St Isaac’s Square • Rastrelli Square • Alexandrovsky Park • Vosstaniya Square Free tourist information service. 14/52 Sadovaya street, St. Petersburg, Russia, 191023, 37 Sadovaya street, St. Petersburg, Russia, 190031 Tel.: +7 (812) 310-28-22; 310-22-31; +7 (931) 326-57-44; Fax: +7 (812) 310-28-22 E-mail: [email protected] www.ispb.info www.visit-petersburg.ru City Marketing Agency: 8 Shpalernaya street. P E R S O N A L S Project/office moving Secure and heated storage VIP Apartments SPA Aroma 24 h Relocation services Triple–A, Attentive, Accurate, (pro)-Active!!!!! The mover that listens and speaks your language. Your contact person: Norbert Gooren, General manager Tel.: +7-812-4319919 Email: [email protected] www.aaa-russia.com 8 (812) 977 71 71 St. Petersburg, 14 Vvedenskaya ul. www.lotos-spa.ru Most sensual touch... Let the world know about you: place your ad in Classifieds Introduction car rental This is for people searching for marriage or long-term relationships For details call 325-60-80 Rent a car 24 hours Prestige cars at reasonable price Tel.: 608 00 00 www.limocars.ru Don’t forget to get your free copy of The St. Petersburg Times at: BUSINESS CENTERS Austrian Business Center Regus 55 Nevsky Pr. Belye Nochi Business Center 23 Malaya Morskaya Ul. Europa House 1 Artilleriyskaya Ul. Goldex 36 Shpalernaya Ul. Gustaf 38 Sredny Pr. V.O. Magnus 34 9-Liniya V.O. MCDS 6 Proletarskoy Diktatury Pl. Moskovsky 212 Moskovsky Pr. Neptun 93А Obvodny Emb. Nevsky 30 20 Nevsky Pr. Nevsky 32/34 32/34 Nevsky Pr. Nevsky 38 38 Nevsky Pr. NRK 3 Kaluzhsky Per. Oscar 13 Fontanka Per. Pulkovo Sky 2 Vnukovskaya Ul. Purneco Limited 63 Zhukovskogo Ul. Renaissance House 17 2-Sovetskaya Ul. Severnaya Stolitsa 36 Moika Emb. Sweden House 1/3A Malaya Konushennaya Ul. RESTAURANTS Abrikosov 40 Nevsky Pr. Bar Tranzit 85А Nevsky Pr. Baranka 5 Chapaeva Ul. Barcelona 26 Ulitsa Rubinshteina 9 Prospekt Chernyshevskogo 1 Bolshaya Konyushennaya Ulitsa Begemot 12 Sadovaya Ul. Bohemia restaurant 16 Teatralnaya Ploshchad Britanskaya konditerskaya 80 Bolshoy Pr. Petrograd Side 25 Grechesky Pr. Café Max 90-92 Nevsky Pr. Coca Inn 13-15 Sadovaya Ul. Coffee House Gourmet 15 Vladimirsky Pr. Coffee House Gourmet 86 Marata Ul. Da Albertone 23 Millionnaya Ul. Dickens Pub 108 Fontanka Emb. Dom Byta 12 Razezzhaya Ul. Europe 1/7 Mikhailovskaya Ul. Evrasia 85А Nevsky Pr. Francesco 47 Suvorovsky Pr. Grad Petrov 5 Universitetskaya Emb. Il Patio 30 Nevsky Pr. 182 Nevsky Pr. J.Walker 36 Griboedova Emb. Jam 12 Ryleeva Ul. James Cook 2 Shvedsky Per. 45 Kamennoostrovsky Pr. Jean Jacque 10 Marata Ul. KFC 11 Sheremetievskaya Ul. 39/40 Sredny Pr. V.O. Konyushenny Dvor 5 Griboedova Emb. Korova Bar 8 Karavannaya Ul. Kvartira №55 36 1-Liniya V.O. Lobby Bar 1/7 Mikhailovskaya Ul. Makaronniki 16 Dobrolyubova Pr. Marco Polo 27 12- Liniya V.O. McDonald’s 2 A. Nevskogo Pl. 18А Bolshevikov Pr. 11 Novatorov Blvd. 41А Grazhdansky Pr. 71 Zanevsky Pr. 39 Kamennoostrovsky Pr. 100-104 Ligovsky Pr. 45/2 Nevsky Pr. 141 Savushkina Ul. 29А Sredny Pr. V.O. 45 Yaroslavsky Pr. Mezonin 1/7 Mikhailovskaya Ul. Mollie’s Pub 36 Rubinshteyna Ul. Moskva 112-114 Nevsky Pr. Ocean 14 Dobrolyubova Pr. Old Customs House 1 Tamozhenny Per. Ovsyanka café 11 Gorokhovaya Ulitsa Peoplecafe 2 Italyanskaya Ul. Pervoe, Vtoroe i Kompot 10 Zhukovskogo Ul. Petropavlovsky 85А Nevsky Pr. Pizza Hut 96 Nevsky Pr. 71 Moika Emb. Pub Bulldog 20/16 Vosstaniya Ul. Pushka Inn 14 Moika Emb. Rossi 1/7 Mikhailovskaya Ul. Saint-Petersburg 5 Griboedova Emb. Sbarro 42 Nevsky Pr. Sever 46 Nevsky Pr. Shamrock 27 Dekabristov Ul. Stroganoff Steak House 4 Konnogvardeisky Blvd. Subway 63 Ulitsa Tchaikovskogo 98 Bolshoy Prospekt Petrograd Side 18 Sytninskaya Ulitsa Tandoor 2 Voznesensky Pr. Teplo 45 Bolshaya Morskaya Ul. Tequila-Boom 57/127 Voznesensky Pr. Terrassa 3 Kazanskaya Ul. Testo 21 Kazanskaya Ul. The Office 5 Kazanskaya Ul. Tinkoff 7 Kazanskaya Ul. Victoria 59 Moika Emb. Volga-Volga Petrovskaya Emb. Zinger 28 Nevsky Pr. Zoom 22 Gorokhovaya Ul. HOTELS 3 Mosta 3 Moika Emb. 5th Corner 13 Zagorodny Pr. Admiralteiskaya 8 Aleksandra Bloka Ul. …and many other locations throughout the city Opinion Wednesday, January 23, 2013 ❖ 15 Another Day, Another Dismembered Body By Victor Davidoff A dysfunctional family with spouses living separate lives but staying together only for the sake of the children. Huge debts from the couple’s small business. A family of five crammed into a tiny, rented tworoom apartment. No chance to start a new business or find well-paying jobs. Add to that serious drinking problems for both husband and wife and you get the perfect setup for a Dostoyevskian novel that inevitably leads to murder. The murder took place Jan. 3 after a fight. The lawyer for former restaurateur Alexei Kabanov said Kabanov confessed to strangling his wife, journalist Irina Kabanova, and dismembering her body. Kabanov started hiding the body parts but was prevented from completing his task by investigators. They searched a car he was driving and found two bags filled with human remains in the trunk. Kabanov made his name in the Moscow restaurant scene. In 2000, he was one of the originators of the innovative OGI Project, named after a publisher of art-house literature. A literary club and cafe hybrid, it was a place where people could have dinner as well as attend exhibitions, book readings, literary festivals and poetry readings. It even had its own library. The project was a success. The owners opened several other cafes under the brand PROgi and had plans to start another 18 cafes. But the company wasn’t able to raise the money to expand, and after the oil boom crashed in 2008, the company began to nosedive. A number of cafes were closed, and others were sold. Kabanov and his wife opened their own cafe, called Cherska, in the center of Moscow. It was financed by the sale of Kabanova’s apartment. But the cafe failed, and the couple lived on her income from a radio talk show. Unfortunately, domestic murders are common in Russia. As psychologist Gennady Chichkanov said in an interview with Verchernyaya Moskva, “Someone’s body is being dismembered every day.” But the Kabanov case got a tremendous amount of attention because of one detail: Kabanov is a well-known opposition figure. He ran in the elections for the opposition’s Coordinating Council. He was arrested several times during the Moscow demonstrations in 2012 and volunteered to help with clean-up operations after the flooding in Krymsk last summer. It is thus no wonder that as soon as the murder was reported, anti-opposition web sites erupted with joy. Blogger Dobryiviwer wrote on his LiveJournal blog: “People who wear the opposition movement’s white ribbon symbol are criminals. … The white-ribboner Alexei Kabanov brutally murdered his own wife and cut her body r By Nikolai Petrov T e g i into pieces. Another opposition leader, Leonid Razvozzhayev, was a mugger. Garry Kasparov is constantly giving speeches in the U.S., while Boris Nemtsov is seen embracing one of Russia’s worst enemies, John McCain. What a lovely creative class Russia has: Murderers, thieves, sadists and traitors.” A blogger on the Ridus agency site — financed by the Kremlin, according to former employees — wrote: “The Zavtra club that Kabanov co-owned is now the favorite hangout for white-ribboners. Maybe that would be a good place to show his art of dismembering a human body.” A translator and anti-opposition writer who uses the pseudonym Goblin wrote: “The avid opposition activist Kabanov killed his wife and dismembered her body. Who else is among them? Necrophiliacs? Cannibals?” Questions like these, which sound like they were taken from Stalinist-era newspapers during the Great Terror, are more puzzling than upset- o n a l d i m e n s ting. Poet Vsevolod Yemelin wrote on his LiveJournal blog: “I don’t wear a white ribbon myself. But what is there to cheer about? What’s going on? One guy out of a demonstration of 100,000 people killed his wife. What does this have to do with the protest movement in general? One person was a murderer, while 99,999 people were not. It’s not going to stop the movement. People will still demonstrate — perhaps not tomorrow, but at some time. Don’t rush to bury the protest movement.” Of course, the Kabanov family tragedy has nothing to do with the protest movement. But it does have something to do with the economic situation in the country, particularly the crisis of small business development. Last year, income from individual businesses in Moscow was down 3 percent, according to an analysis published in Kommersant. The number of entrepreneurs has been falling over the last four years; it fell 4 percent in 2012. More and more small business i o n he first weeks of 2013 have already shown that relations between Russian authorities and society will be no better this year than they were in 2012. The large-scale “March against Scoundrels” rally in Moscow on Jan. 13 and the smaller but significant rallies in a host of major cities showed that large numbers of demonstrators can be mobilized on short notice to protest the actions of the authorities. The angry protests might be triggered by fraudulent elections, repressive measures against protesters or even something as seemingly far removed from the standard political agenda as the recent law prohibiting U.S. citizens from adopting Russian children. Among the key things that could trigger protests this year are the criminal charges authorities plan to file against participants in the mass protest rally on Bolotnaya Ploshchad on May 6, the day before Vladimir Putin’s inauguration. In a Levada Center survey conducted in December, 40 percent of respondents said the process could have a negative effect on the authorities. At the same time, 40 percent said they believe dissatisfaction and resentment will grow as a result of unjust court rulings and abuses by the judicial system, police and government officials. In addition, 12 percent of those questioned predicted that the protest mood would Victor Davidoff is a Moscow-based writer and journalist who follows the Russian blogosphere. s More Protests in 2013 increase and become more radicalized. Also noteworthy, opinion polls indicate that a significant part of the population sympathizes with protesters. According to a recent survey by the Levada Center, more than onethird of Russians fully or Nikolai Petrov partially support the mass protests. The environmental protest movement is also growing. Expert Siberia magazine named an environmental activist as its person of the year for 2012. Also in Siberia, the Krasnoyarsk is Opposed movement forced local authorities to halt construction of an iron plant in Yenesei that would have heavily polluted the environment. An increasing number of people who were previously unengaged are now joining the environmental protest movement. In the fall, 181,000 Krasnoyarsk residents — one out of every three adults in the city — signed a petition demanding that President Vladimir Putin halt construction of the plant. A number of environmental protests were also held in the Moscow region demanding an end to highway construction and the clearing of forests, the most notable being the Khimki forest owners and entrepreneurs, whether they are engaged in computer programming or trade, are being forced to find full-time jobs and abandon their hopes of owning their own business. The analytical Internet site Tolkovatel says “business activity in Moscow is slowing down, and white-collar labor is less in demand. Middleaged, middle-class migrants to Moscow can’t find work. They can either go back to the provinces or even abroad, or they have to change professions.” There were many factors that led to the murder in the Kabanov family. But there is a larger lesson that can be gleaned from this tragedy. A country that denies opportunities to its creative and entrepreneurial class is a country without prospects for economic development in the 21st century. dispute and the defense of the Tsagovsky forest in Zhukovsky, 25 kilometers from Moscow. Demonstrations against social and economic conditions, especially the increase in utility rates, are also increasing. Spontaneous rallies were held recently in Volgograd, Kaliningrad, Bryansk, Omsk, Pervouralsk and other cities. Rising prices on the full range of consumer goods and price hikes on alcohol and tobacco products are also fueling social and economic protests. The new law on education, which entails reductions in many areas, is slated to go into full force this fall, along with similar “reforms” in the the health care system. Both of these initiatives alone could add attract more Russians to the protest movement. As a measure to prevent unrest, Putin promised to raise salaries for state employees, largely drawing on regional budgets to fund the increase. But Putin is taking a risk in potentially creating a “middle class” of bureaucrats, which he hopes will counterbalance the more independent opposition movement. We will likely see the first problems in Putin’s strategy when the ineptitude of governors and the Regional Development Ministry leads to financial mismanagement and chaos. Nikolai Petrov is a scholar in residence at the Carnegie Moscow Center. ë‡ÌÍÚ-èÂÚ·ۄ í‡ÈÏÒ The St. Petersburg Times is a part of Sanoma Independent Media Chairman of Supervisory board: Derk Sauer Director: Mikhail Doubik Publisher: OOO “Neva Media” General Director: Tatyana Turikova Editorial: Shura Collinson, Editor-in-Chief Advertising: Elena Evstafieva Subscription: Viktoria Borovkova Production: Alla Kalinovskaya Designers: Viktoria Ivanyutina, Lyudmila Popova IT Department: Sergei Karasev OOO Neva Media ì˜Â‰ËÚÂθ Ë ËÁ‰‡ÚÂθ – ééé “ç‚‡ å‰ˇ” Copyright © 2005 The St. Petersburg Times. All Rights Reserved. Mass media registration certificate number èà ‹ îë2-8918 of November 30, 2007, issued by the Directorate of the Federal Service for the monitoring of compliance with legislation in the sphere of mass communications and the preservation of cultural heritage of the North-West Federal District. ë‚ˉÂÚÂθÒÚ‚Ó Ó Â„ËÒÚ‡ˆËË Ò‰ÒÚ‚‡ χÒÒÓ‚ÓÈ ËÌÙÓχˆËË èà ‹ îë2-8918 ÓÚ 30 ÌÓfl·fl 2007 „Ó‰‡, ‚˚‰‡ÌÓ ìÔ‡‚ÎÂÌËÂÏ î‰ ‡Î¸ÌÓÈ ÒÎÛÊ·˚ ÔÓ Ì‡‰ÁÓÛ Á‡ Òӷβ‰ÂÌËÂÏ Á‡ÍÓÌÓ‰‡ÚÂθÒÚ‚‡ ‚ ÒÙ χÒÒÓ‚˚ı ÍÓÏÏÛÌË͇ˆËÈ Ë Óı‡Ì ÍÛθÚÛÌÓ„Ó Ì‡ÒΉËfl ÔÓ ë‚ÂÓ-á‡Ô‡‰ÌÓÏÛ Ù‰‡θÌÓÏÛ ÓÍÛ„Û. Отпечатано в ОАО «Первая Образцовая типография» филиал «СПб газетный комплекс». 198216, СПб, Ленинский пр., 139. Заказ № 978. Подписано в печать: по графику в 1.00, фактически в 1.00. Тираж 20000 экз. Распространяется бесплатно. Address: 190000, Russia, St. Petersburg, 4 Konnogvardeisky boulevard, Entrance 7, 3rd floor. Telephone/Fax: (7-812) 325-60-80. ĉÂÒ Â‰‡ÍˆËË: 190000, Конногвардейский бульвар, д. 4, лит. А, подъезд 7, этаж 3 Internet: http://www.sptimes.ru The St. Petersburg Times is a free publication. Feature Wednesday, January 23, 2013 ❖ 16 Hermitage Finds Itself in Ferragamo’s Shoes By Galina Stolyarova T H E S T. P E T E R S B U R G T I M E S S alvatore Ferragamo, one of Italy’s most renowned and successful fashion companies, has become the first member of the association of the Friends of the Hermitage Museum in Italy. What will the alliance between the iconic shoe brand and the vast art collection bring to these venerable institutions — and indeed, their dedicated audiences? Giovanna Gentile Ferragamo, vice-president of the company and the daughter of its founder Salvatore Ferragamo, spoke to The St. Petersburg Times about this collaboration and the many connections between the Ferragamo family and the world of art. “Naturally, we are fascinated by the Hermitage’s collections, and we would be thrilled to be able to get inspiration from the amazing artworks; our designers recently had the precious opportunity to study the archives of the Bolshoi Theater in Moscow,” Ferragamo said. On the board of the Hermitage Friends in Italy, Ferragamo works alongside the heads of some of Italy’s most respected businesses, as well as scholars and members of aristocratic families, such as Contessa Maria Vittoria Rimbotti, president of the Friends of the Uffizzi Gallery Association; Claudia Cremonini, head of the external relations department of the Cremonini food processing holding; professor Stefania Pavan, a senior lecturer in Russian literature at the University of Florence; and Marquise Bona Frescobaldi. “We are very honored by this opportunity to be so close to the Hermitage Museum; the Ferragamo family has always been affiliated with arts and culture,” Ferragamo said. Most recently, the company sponsored the restoration of Leonardo da Vinci’s “The Virgin and Child With Saint Anne,” a newly restored oil-onwood painting dating back to circa 1510 and left unfinished by the artist when he died in 1519. The painting was the focal point of the Louvre’s exhibition “Saint Anne, Leonardo da Vinci’s Ultimate Masterpiece,” which juxtaposed sketches and drawings from the last two decades of the master’s life. The sponsorship earned Ferragamo the right to hold its first ever fashion runway show inside the Louvre, which took place in June 2012. Yet of all the arts — just like in Russian revolutionary Vladimir Lenin’s famous declaration — cinema has been the most important art form for Ferragamo since the 1920s. Hollywood would bring Ferragamo energy, inspiration — and the loyalty of distinguished clients such as Lauren Bacall, Audrey Hepburn, Ava Gardner, Greta Garbo and Sophia Loren. Salvatore Ferragamo Spa has made it a tradition to work for big film productions, both by making accessories for them and by working closely and actively with costume designers on set. Collaborations in the last 20 years include Alan Parker’s “Evita” in 1996, which starred Madonna in the lead role, and Andy Tennant’s 1998 film “Ever After: A Cinderella Story,” starring Drew Barrymore, Anjelica Huston and Jeanne Moreau, and more recently on Baz Luhrmann’s “Australia” (2008), with Nicole Kidman in the lead role. “Evita herself was a dedicated client of ours, and for the film we made exact copies of the models that she had ordered,” Ferragamo recalls. “So what Madonna wears in the film are in fact replicas of the very same designs that we had made for Evita.” Salvatore Ferragamo used to divide his female clients into three categories: The Cinderella, the Venus and the Aristocrat. It was the same story with Meryl Streep and the film “The Iron Lady,” in which the actress portrayed former U.K. prime minister Margaret Thatcher. “We had the history of her orders in the archives, and we were able to produce copies of Thatcher’s shoes for Meryl Streep,” Ferragamo said. During a visit to Italy for the launch ceremony of the association in July 2012, the Hermitage’s director, Mikhail Piotrovsky, visited the Ferragamo Museum in Florence, where he attended an exhibit dedicated to Marilyn Monroe. Some of the items at the permanent collection of the Ferragamo Museum are particularly moving for Giovanna Ferragamo. For example, she has a strong emotional connection with the patchwork shoes that are associated with her childhood. “Over the years, my father had made — he did it a few times — a for spt Ferragamo made copies of Margaret Thatcher’s shoes for the film ‘The Iron Lady.’ alexander belenky / spt Giovanna Gentile Ferragamo, the company’s vice-president, pictured during an interview at the Hotel Astoria in St. Petersburg. patchwork flat shoe design which is made of many little pieces of leather sewn together with another piece of leather,” she remembers. “The little bits had different colors and textures. These pieces could be lizard or suede, or anything else. When my sister and I were about 10 years old, he would make these shoes for us. I was a very shy child, and, of course, the other kids did not have shoes like those. So I hardly ever wore the fantastic shoes — or, when I did, I tried to hide my feet under the chair! When I think of those now, my thoughts are very different. If I had them today, I would love them.” Salvatore Ferragamo used to divide his female clients into three categories: The Cinderella, the Venus and the Aristocrat. The division was not based on style, however, but solely on the size of the ladies’ feet. A Cinderella had a shoe size smaller than a six (39), the Venus took a size six, and the Aristocrat a seven (41) or larger. Joking aside, when he created shoes for any great actress he was working with, he would start with their personality. “Marilyn Monroe was a stiletto woman — and indeed, this shape comes to mind immediately when we think of her,” said Giovanna Ferragamo. “This was an ideal match between a woman and a fashion item, and stilettos are fre- Fashion aficionados hope the cooperation between Ferragamo and the Hermitage will lead to new collections inspired by art. quently even associated with Monroe. By comparison, Greta Garbo loved flat, somewhat masculine-looking shoes.” Russian admirers of the Ferragamo brand are hoping that this cooperation will result not only in arts projects, but also new collections inspired by the Hermitage’s objects of art. The Hermitage has already collaborated with considerable success with St. Petersburg designers Lilia Kisselenko, Tatyana Parfyonova and Ianis Chamalidy, who received permission to study the museum’s collections, consult curators and produce new designs inspired and influenced by the Hermitage’s treasures. Is there anything that Giovanna Ferragamo really likes and remains faithful to that is not fashionable? “A lot of things, actually, starting with this bag,” she replies, pointing at her elegant, compact, black leather handbag. “The company first produced them about 25 years ago, and indeed, Ferragamo does not make these designs anymore. They do it for me, upon request, specifically — and I have a few of them, in different colors. “Come to think about it, most of my wardrobe is not fashionable. If I opened my closet, people would think, goodness, this is all vintage!” Учредитель и издатель – ООО «Нева Медиа». Главный редактор – Шура Коллинсон. Свидетельство о регистрации средства массовой информации ПИ № ФС2-8918 от 30 ноября 2007 года, выдано Управлением Федеральной службы по надзору за соблюдением законодательства в сфере массовых коммуникаций и охране культурного наследия по Саверо-Западному федеральному округу. Отпечатано в ОАО «Первая Образцовая типография» филиал «СПб газетный комплекс». 198216, СПб, Ленинский пр., 139. Заказ № 978. Подписано в печать: по графику в 1.00, фактически в 1.00. Тираж 20000 экз. Распространяется бесплатно.
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