Culture in Russia
Libraries & Museums
Russia has over 50,000 state public libraries (39,000 of these rural) in
total possession of over a billion books, and the stock is steadily growing.
Every general-educational school and the majority of offices and large factories
have libraries of their own.
Close to 1,500 museums cover practically all fields of knowledge-historical ,
ethnographic, memorial, of folk crafts, fine and applied arts, theatre, music,
natural sciences, technology, and many others. Museums-reserves have lately come
into the foreground. Twenty open-air ethnographic museums present folk
architecture, arts and everyday life. All museum collections, with a total
exceeding fifty million items of historical, scientific and artistic value,
comprise Russia's invaluable museum fund, its precious national treasure.
Theater & Art
The reforms removed all fetters from the stage. Despite all the problems of
contemporary Russian life, the number of theatres is growing. Up to fifty new
companies have appeared in 1993-1994. All told, Russia has 413 companies, with
drama accounting for over half. Since 1989 local budgets have financed theatres
to encourage provincial theatre. There are 31 languages of acting in our
multi-ethnic country. Some ethnic companies are top-notch, and worthy rivals of
Moscow theatres.
In 1974, a team of Moscow artists opposing officially encouraged practices
for the first time threw a public challenge to the powers-that-be with an
impromptu shaw on a strip of waste land in Belyaevo, a distant suburb. The
police literally razed it to the ground with orders to bulldoze the pictures.
Later, some non-conformistworks found their way abroad.
Things have now changed beyond recognition. The new Artists' Union Charter,
adopted in 1993, proclaims freedom of creativity, high professionalism and
humane goals among its basic principles. The union arranges exhibitions for its
13,000 members, and helps them with Picture sales in its many salons. Private
galleries are also burgeoning throughout the country. Moscow alone has over a
hundred.
Folk Art
Today, folk art in Russia survives in two basic forms - handicrafts practiced
on a broad scale and works of art created by gifted persons working at home.
Articles fashioned from marble, glass, ceramics, metal, or ornamental textiles
have really become part of our lives, adding a touch of beauty and hannony to
our daily existence.
The most popular handicrafts in present-day Russia are: wood carving and
painting (Bogorodskoe, Khotkovo, Abramtsevo-Kudrino)- the Golden Khokhloma;
artistic ceramics (Gzhel); clay toys (Dymkovo, Kargopol, Filimonovo, Abashevo);
acquer painting (Fedoskino, Palekh, Mstera, Kholui); decorative tray painting (Zhostovo,
Troitskoe); artistic metalworking (Veliky Ustiug silver, Rostov enamel, Kazakovo
filigree)- bone carving (Kholmogoli, Tobolsk, Chukotka, Khotkovo); artistic
stone working (Tyva carved sculpture)- lace making (Vologda, Vyatka, Yelets) -
embroidery, golden thread needlework, pattern weaving and rug making. Whatever
kind of folk art is looked at, it reflects the richness and diversity of the
nation's soul and the splendor of the works crafted by its hands