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The Moscow Times Moscow Guide – Winter 2008

Since the middle of autumn one of the most important topics of discussion, could only be … no, not the financial crisis… New Year! The winter issue of The Moscow Times Moscow Guide is entirely devoted to New Years celebrations. Seven great ideas for celebrating the “Night of Nights” will help readers finalise their plans and choose how and where to party, give fresh ideas and lots of practical advice.

And don’t forget – problems will come by themselves, but happiness and luck need an invitation. That why the more cheerful and light-hearted your celebration of the coming holiday is, the happier and more successful 2009 will be for you.




The Crisis: Signs of a Kremlin Fearful Of Unrest
Sociologist Yevgeny Gontmakher has painted a disturbing picture of what might emerge from the financial crisis, forecasting continued unemployment, huge protests and spreading violence.

Market Matters: Huge Grain Harvest No Boon for Farmers
This year Russia is enjoying the biggest grain harvest it has ever seen -- and farmers couldn't be more worried.


The Moscow Times » Issue 4034 » City Wise
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Moscow Museum Of Modern Art
Most of the pieces are landscapes or still lifes and influenced by Cezanne.

Avant-Garde Heirs Go on Show

19 November 2008By Marina Darmaros / Special to The Moscow TimesThe Jack of Diamonds was a group of artists that became the main exponent of the Russian avant-garde before the Revolution, a time when nobody imagined how short the first breath of art for art's sake in Russian painting would last.

Their brief life span produced only two notable Russian followers, Grigory Sretensky and Nina Stenshinskaya, whose work is now on show at the Moscow Museum of Modern Art.

The Jack of Diamonds included artists such as Robert Falk, Aristarkh Lentulov, Ilya Mashkov and Pyotr Konchalovsky, and following their first scandalous exhibition in 1909 the group, which mixed folk art into its artwork, became the most significant movement of avant-garde artists in Russia.

The name was chosen because it emphasized the impish attitude to life that the artists had and their love of the playing card, which appears in a number of their works.

Avant-garde art fell out of Soviet favor at the end of the 1920s, replaced by socialist realism, with its images of striving workers and heroic soldiers.


Moscow Museum of Modern Art
The exhibition features the later work of Sretensky and Stenshinskaya.


Two artists who did not turn to socialist realism were Sretensky and Stenshinskaya, pupils of Konchalovsky and Mashkov, respectively. The two finally enter the limelight in the "Heirs to the Jack of Diamonds" exhibition.

The pair are "masters whose talent is incontestable," according to Valery Turchin, the curator of the exhibition and a professor of art history at Moscow State University.

It is the first large-scale show for Sretensky and Stenshinskaya, and it follows recent successful sales of Sretensky's paintings in London auctions, where many pieces were bought for private collections in Europe and the United States.

Sretensky and Stenshinskaya started their creative careers in the 1920s, before seeing all their work destroyed when the Nazis bombed Moscow in World War II. The show displays the works of the postwar period, which survived thanks to the efforts of the artists' relatives and private collectors.

An oil painting of Tuapse, a city on the Black Sea, shows off Sretensky's emotional expression of color.


Moscow Museum of Modern Art


"I'm more attached to the paintings of Sretensky, since to me they have a greater inner strength, which by no means diminishes the importance of Stenshinskaya's paintings, which are more colorful and tranquil," said Dr. Dragoljub Milicevic, who is founding a nonprofit organization dedicated to the couple.

The pair's paintings are shown with a few of their teachers' works -- pieces by Konchalovsky, Mashkov and Kuprin are all on display -- and the museum has also placed a little jewel among the art: an easel made by Mashkov as a present for his favorite disciple, Stenshinskaya.

All the works are Cezanne-influenced, a natural continuation of the work of the Jack of Diamonds group, featuring dachas, still lifes with sushki (traditional Russian biscuits), a painted teapot and a series of intimate landscapes from Gorky to Kyrgyzstan, the Sea of Azov and Moscow.

The works are mainly landscapes and still lifes devoid of any political connotations, just like most of their work in the 1920s.

"During the dark period of the Bolshevik era, they remained faithful to the quiet and dignified post-Cezannism, known nowadays as the Moscow School of Painting," said Milicevic. "In other words, they carried the torch of freedom of artistic expression through the darkness."

"Heirs to Masters of the Jack of Diamonds: Paintings by Grigory Sretensky and Nina Stenshinskaya" runs through Nov. 30 at the Moscow Museum of Modern Art: 25 Ulitsa Petrovka. M. Chekhovskaya. 694-2890. www.mmoma.ru.

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19 November 2008
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