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    Art show seeks the ‘real Moscow’ in grim suburbs

    KATE de PURY
    Associated PressNovember 24, 2019
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    Russia Art in the Suburbs
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    In this photo taken on Sunday, Nov. 3, 2019, Soviet-era soda vending machines are on display in the 'Museum of Industrial Culture' in a dilapidated industrial zone of Moscow, Russia. Moscow’s suburbs are the focus of a major international art exhibition that has just opened in the Russian capital. The exhibit uses contemporary art to explore the many hidden facets of life beyond the Russian capital’s nucleus. Austrian cultural attache says the ‘real’ Moscow where most of the city’s 12.6 million people live, is outside the center. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko)

    MOSCOW (AP) — As sleet falls on a cold November day, communist-era apartment blocks dominating Moscow’s suburban skyline look bleak and forbidding. But it’s precisely these sprawling city outskirts that are the focus of a major international art exhibition.

    “Beyond the Center” is staging art events across Moscow’s vast urban space starting this fall and culminating in March 2020. With the participation of the Museum of Vienna and the Austrian Cultural Forum, the exhibit uses contemporary art to explore the many hidden facets of life outside the Russian capital’s nucleus.

    Simon Mraz, Austria’s cultural attache to Russia and director of the Austrian Cultural Forum in Russia, says the “real” Moscow, where most of the city’s 12.6 million people live, is outside the center.

    “They all come to Moscow with some dreams, facing struggles, hoping for a better future. They won’t find it in Red Square and definitely not in the Kremlin,” Mraz, curator of the exhibition, told The Associated Press.

    Despite a steep decline in Russia’s population, Moscow is growing — fueled by a steady influx of people in search of jobs and a better life. The challenges facing modern Russia are reflected in the capital’s complex socio-economic layers and ethnic mix from the entire former Soviet Union.

    Hailing from southern Russia, self-taught painter Pasmur Rachuiko offers an extreme outsider’s view of Moscow reality.

    Burka-clad figures, policemen and wolves pose in the suburbs, gangsters have angels’ wings and young women carrying AK-47 rifles stare out of his canvases. Rachuiko depicts himself as “everyman” among this cast of new Russian archetypes.

    “These characters are from my personal world, but living in Russia today, scrolling through my Facebook feed, I see these symbols all around me,” said Rachuiko, whose exhibit is at the Gogol Center in central Moscow.

    The paintings sparked disapproval from Moscow’s culture department, but Rachuiko found support from the arts establishment, including theater director Kirill Serebrennikov, himself still under threat from the authorities after a long term of house arrest.

    The urban renewal project aimed at impressing World Cup visitors to Moscow in 2018 didn’t reach Liublino, a working-class suburb. In this dilapidated industrial zone, the “Museum of Industrial Culture” houses a private collection of discarded objects, amassed by former auto engineer Lev Zheleznyov. It’s a social history of more than 70 years of communism, told though ordinary things people recognize from a shared past.

    “It’s a museum of memory. We are not so interested in how a lamp works, more that it was in someone’s home,” Zheleznyov said.

    The Soviet legacy is palpable here, Mraz said.

    “It’s where the broken empire has become the reality of life,” he said.

    Russia’s young, urban middle class lives further out, where high-rise blocks jostle with vast highways, evidence of Moscow’s rapid post-communist expansion.

    “Success is the story of how you came to Moscow, found work, got a mortgage and became a real person,” says sociologist Natalia Zubarevich. “It’s a tough city, totally intolerant and very selfish.”

    In “Polly wants a cracker,” Austrian artist Michele Pagel sees a darker side of Moscow – domestic abuse. Her visceral sculptures, on show in Mraz’s apartment, located opposite the Kremlin, seek to bring violence against women back from the peripheral vision of Russian society to its central focus.

    Attending the opening, lawyer Alyona Popova campaigns to reverse a 2017 law decriminalizing certain types of domestic abuse in Russia. According to the advocacy group “You Are Not Alone,” an estimated 16 million Russian women suffer domestic violence each year.

    A residential complex called Novo-Molokovo, just outside Moscow and still under construction, houses the newest generation of Muscovites. A studio apartment here costs $95,500.

    Curator Elena Ishchenko set art installations inside an “odnushka,” or studio apartment.

    “We got used to viewing the suburbs as strange, remote areas we don’t want to visit,” she said. “But when you get out here, thanks to the artist, you see something you wouldn’t expect.”

    ZIP Group constructed a mesh tower to store domestic objects owned by middle class households. Artist Stefan Shubutin imagines breaking down the walls that isolate people living in tiny, high-rise apartments, their goods stored on overflowing balconies.

    “The flats are closed, people don’t often meet their neighbors,” Shubutin said. “But here you can see your neighbor’s stuff and ask to borrow a sled, skis, even a washing machine.”

    Zubarevich, the sociologist, hopes a grassroots civil society will grow in Moscow’s residential districts, but it’s a social trend the Kremlin watches carefully and any political activism brings repression.

    “This city shows what Russia could be,” she said. “It’s our hope of modernization.”

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