Monday, March 25, 2013

Museum of Russian Culture & San Francisco

Since last week, I have been in San Francisco, California, on the mission of applying from my Russian visa. So far, all is well and it should be ready by next week. In the interim, I have had the chance to discover the little corner of Russia that lives here in the City. 


Dolls and ephemera of Russia.

By chance, I discovered a small but well kept institute of Russian-Americans here, where you can visit the free and open to the public Museum of Russian Culture. With an intimate atmosphere and quiet hospitality, the space reminded me very much of the apartment museums of Saint Petersburg, the gallery is a wonderful discovery and escape from the American streets into a little corner of Russia. The museum features a well honed mixture of arts, crafts, history and local culture.

Inscription with peacocks.
Perhaps the most amazing thing in the museum is an original White Army flag, authentically stained with blood of the counter revolutionaries, hanging discreetly in a corner amongst other textiles. Having a guide point out such details is what makes the expert set of eyes so useful when visiting small and detail-packed museums.

Tolstoy and historical documents.
The gallery has its own semi-official tumblr blog Zolotoivek, which focuses on the Golden Years of Russian history, 1880-1940.  I was lucky enough to have a personal tour of the museum from the blogs curator, who warmly and with informative passion showed me through the detailed cases and wall hangings that consist of the museum's collections. Since the 1970s, the place remains largely unchanged, and even includes a small private library of Russian books.

View of the Museum.
Overall, I highly recommend any passer-bys, visitors and locals of the Bay Area to visit the Cultural Center. Since it relies only on volunteer work, any donations are highly appreciated. I personally love that such museums like this even continue to exist, fostering community and adding to the rich "salad bowl" of the United States that make the country so rich for discovering the pockets of immigrants that add to the vibrancy of the nation as a whole. 

Wednesday, March 06, 2013

Russian Quilts & Sochi 2014

After some cursory research into quilting in Russia, I have discovered that the new logo and branding identity for the Sochi 2014 Winter Olympic games will be comprised of a medely of geometric patterns based on traditional Russian quilt designs! Credit to this small but mighty American quilting blog:
The Olympics organizing committee wanted a special symbol to illustrate both the diversity and unity of Russia. So the 16 folk images within the patterns represent Russia’s different nations and cultures.

Based on the press conference, the designs were “created from the motifs of ornaments of the most famous Russian national crafts. Here we can see Uftyuzhskaya painting and Vologda lace, Gzhel and Zhostovo painting, Kubachi patterns and Pavlov Posad shawls, Mezenskaya painting and Khokhloma, Yakutsk patterns and Ivanovo chintz.”


Unveiling the Logo for Sochi 2014


The logo is fresh and colorful, much more colorful than traditional Winter Olympics designs, which tend towards the monochromatic and understated. What's exceptional about this logo is the cultural specific link, as well as a sporting event giving the visual arts and crafts a place in their halls! The pattern will be applied all over Russia, including usage on trains and in other public spaces. I am sure the Russian Quilters Association, based in Saint Petersburg, must be proud.

Various variations of the banners.


More news on this topic to come, as we get closer and closer to 2014!

Tuesday, March 05, 2013

Art of Russia Documentary from the BBC

Thanks to a recent reshowing on BBC America, I have now watched this fantastic documentary by Andrew Graham-Dixon, an excellent guide with a refreshingly open and international view of art history. Aptly named The Art of Russia, the program is diced into three components: Into the Forest: beginning with early roots in Russia's Kievian history, secluded from Western culture until its influential opening to the West by Peter the Great. 


The second part, Roads to Revolution, examines the sweep of European modernism in art across Russia, as well as the 19th Century movement led by Tolstoy to rediscover Russia's roots in the forests where its genuine soul and people dwell. Political unrest and ever growing estrangement between the ruling classes and ruled create a unique divide in styles, one gazing outwardly to Western elegance and excess, and other inwardly towards internal struggle and harsh reality of daily life within the country. Most noteworthy is the Russian interpretation of the Arts & Crafts movement, led by Lev Tolstoy and Ilya Repin, which was not a retaliation against the industrialization of craft, but instead a politically motivated movement to go back to the naturalism and naivety of the land, Mother Russia, herself.


Smashing the Mould, as the eponymous third part is named, bulldozes straight on into the Bolshevik revolution and the events that followed, showing the casualties it claimed in history as well as in the progress of art in Russia. Icons and Orthodoxy are replaced by a rigid propaganda and worship of the State's idealistic and ruthless vision of total Communism. The skeletons of an era long past are dug up, and a look towards what lies head is examined. And what exactly does lie ahead? That is exactly what I wonder as well. He touches on the notion of uncertainty and searching for a new voice. A good point, however, it is not one that is unique to contemporary Russia.


Overall, this documentary is an excellent introduction into the vast and diverse realm of Russian art. It shows us so much within such a brief period of time, and running at nearly three hours total, it seems to fly by, telling the great story of Russia's pictorial development with rapid excitement and passion. Graham-Dixon's tastes sometimes tinge the atmosphere, with his obvious disapporoval of Tsar Nicholas II's taste and his gushing, unabashed adorement of Rodchenko's posters, yet overall the piece is very informative in showing us the tip of the gargantuan iceberg is that is Russia's rich art history. Highly recommended, especially since he was granted access to places that the average tourist might never get to see! The above are clips, to see the entirety of the documentary, catch it over here at Doku Watch.