The Fort Worth Press - 'Close our eyes': To escape war, Muscovites flock to high culture

USD -
AED 3.672497
AFN 63.000127
ALL 83.045552
AMD 377.608336
ANG 1.790083
AOA 916.999582
ARS 1400.115202
AUD 1.437391
AWG 1.8025
AZN 1.698782
BAM 1.692703
BBD 2.017085
BDT 122.889314
BGN 1.709309
BHD 0.375272
BIF 2964.437482
BMD 1
BND 1.280822
BOB 6.920277
BRL 5.326897
BSD 1.001532
BTN 93.628346
BWP 13.656801
BYN 3.038457
BYR 19600
BZD 2.014228
CAD 1.373511
CDF 2274.999939
CHF 0.790045
CLF 0.023138
CLP 913.629897
CNY 6.886396
CNH 6.916875
COP 3696.54
CRC 467.791212
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 95.432004
CZK 21.264698
DJF 178.340531
DKK 6.480025
DOP 59.449729
DZD 131.454091
EGP 52.035801
ERN 15
ETB 157.836062
EUR 0.867199
FJD 2.21445
FKP 0.749521
GBP 0.752165
GEL 2.715018
GGP 0.749521
GHS 10.917148
GIP 0.749521
GMD 73.499323
GNF 8778.549977
GTQ 7.671603
GYD 209.529662
HKD 7.830705
HNL 26.509205
HRK 6.534203
HTG 131.388314
HUF 342.022986
IDR 16990.85
ILS 3.139701
IMP 0.749521
INR 93.948497
IQD 1311.97909
IRR 1315624.999818
ISK 124.719822
JEP 0.749521
JMD 157.346743
JOD 0.709014
JPY 159.524981
KES 129.250288
KGS 87.447897
KHR 4001.973291
KMF 426.999949
KPW 900.003974
KRW 1513.979862
KWD 0.30657
KYD 0.834581
KZT 481.491739
LAK 21506.092917
LBP 89692.06536
LKR 312.41778
LRD 183.27376
LSL 16.894603
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 6.411466
MAD 9.358386
MDL 17.440975
MGA 4176.061001
MKD 53.348104
MMK 2099.452431
MNT 3566.950214
MOP 8.084003
MRU 40.089837
MUR 46.570088
MVR 15.459624
MWK 1736.722073
MXN 17.992025
MYR 3.939499
MZN 63.897237
NAD 16.894749
NGN 1356.739806
NIO 36.852081
NOK 9.616303
NPR 149.804404
NZD 1.725615
OMR 0.382195
PAB 1.001519
PEN 3.46252
PGK 4.323066
PHP 60.376987
PKR 279.628351
PLN 3.713335
PYG 6541.287659
QAR 3.662273
RON 4.417101
RSD 101.650468
RUB 84.556145
RWF 1457.231632
SAR 3.754899
SBD 8.05166
SCR 13.74181
SDG 600.999794
SEK 9.395399
SGD 1.283745
SHP 0.750259
SLE 24.57502
SLL 20969.510825
SOS 572.35094
SRD 37.487497
STD 20697.981008
STN 21.204227
SVC 8.762971
SYP 110.564047
SZL 16.900787
THB 33.056504
TJS 9.619362
TMT 3.51
TND 2.95786
TOP 2.40776
TRY 44.32892
TTD 6.794814
TWD 32.133504
TZS 2600.260986
UAH 43.875212
UGX 3785.603628
UYU 40.356396
UZS 12210.172836
VES 454.69063
VND 26339
VUV 119.226095
WST 2.727792
XAF 567.726608
XAG 0.015794
XAU 0.000234
XCD 2.70255
XCG 1.80494
XDR 0.706079
XOF 567.716781
XPF 103.216984
YER 238.584438
ZAR 17.19515
ZMK 9001.198872
ZMW 19.554625
ZWL 321.999592
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • CMSD

    -0.2420

    22.658

    -1.07%

  • JRI

    -0.3900

    11.77

    -3.31%

  • RIO

    -2.5000

    83.15

    -3.01%

  • BCE

    0.0600

    25.79

    +0.23%

  • GSK

    -0.5300

    51.84

    -1.02%

  • NGG

    -3.5400

    81.99

    -4.32%

  • CMSC

    -0.2000

    22.65

    -0.88%

  • RELX

    -0.4600

    33.36

    -1.38%

  • BCC

    -1.5600

    68.3

    -2.28%

  • BTI

    -1.3500

    57.37

    -2.35%

  • RYCEF

    -1.2600

    15.34

    -8.21%

  • AZN

    -5.3300

    183.6

    -2.9%

  • VOD

    -0.0900

    14.33

    -0.63%

  • BP

    -1.0800

    44.78

    -2.41%

'Close our eyes': To escape war, Muscovites flock to high culture
'Close our eyes': To escape war, Muscovites flock to high culture / Photo: © AFP

'Close our eyes': To escape war, Muscovites flock to high culture

In front of Moscow's ornate Bolshoi Theatre, its soft yellow lights illuminating a snowstorm in the Russian capital, Valentina Ivakina had come to "escape today's problems".

Text size:

It is a knowing reference to the war that has been raging between Russia and Ukraine for the past four years, with Muscovites increasingly turning to culture and art to detach from the reality of the conflict, unleashed by the Kremlin's February 2022 offensive.

Concert halls are packed, the famed Tretyakov Gallery is teeming even on a midweek afternoon. A Marc Chagall exhibition at the Pushkin Museum: sold out.

Museum attendance in Moscow, which competes with Saint Petersburg as Russia's cultural capital, jumped 30 percent in 2025, according to deputy mayor Natalya Sergunina.

Ivakina has spent much of the winter bouncing from show to show.

On a stormy evening, the 45-year-old marketing specialist was heading to a Sergei Prokofiev opera at the Bolshoi's historic stage. The night before, at its New Stage, she was at a ballet based on an Anton Chekhov work. A week ago, the theatre.

"It's a certain attempt to escape reality," she said, standing on the glittering square in front of the Bolshoi as she talked about having "fewer opportunities to go somewhere and leave the country."

Russians have become accustomed to alluding about the war in code, avoiding specific phrases or opinions that could land them years in prison under military censorship laws.

Usually a single phrase -- "the context" -- is enough to know the underlying topic of conversation.

The conflict, launched when Vladimir Putin ordered troops into Ukraine on February 24, 2022, has become Europe's deadliest since World War II, killing tens of thousands of civilians and hundreds of thousands of soldiers.

Immediately hit with sanctions, Russia has been pushed off the world stage -- athletes banned, artists' shows cancelled and tourist visas harder to obtain.

At home, the state has pushed the war into daily life -- promoting the army, soldiers, and masculine narratives of "patriotic values" as core Russian values.

Those who openly oppose are liable to arrest and prosecution.

- 'Silent conspiracy' -

"There seems to be very few things left to cling to," said Viktor Chelin, a photographer coming out of the Chagall exhibition, titled "The Joy of Earthly Gravity", with his wife.

Trips to the museum are "a kind of silent conspiracy," he told AFP.

"You walk around and understand that you're united with others by the admiration of a certain beauty."

"Something enormous happened in Russia, which we are all afraid of. We close our eyes to it, but try to live and maintain and certain normality," said Chelin, 30.

Wearing a cap pulled low, he talked about "the feeling, as they say, of a feast in time of plague," a reference to the 1830s play by Alexander Pushkin, Russia's national poet, written during a cholera epidemic.

He and his wife moved to Georgia for two years after Russia launched its offensive, before returning to Saint Petersburg.

They are now regular visitors to the grand Hermitage Museum, housed in the former palace of the Tsars.

"We're not even going to see specific works of art, we're grounding ourselves, as if we're connecting to something familiar," he said.

Sociologist Denis Volkov of the Levada Centre -- designated a "foreign agent" by Russian authorities -- said escapism is prevalent across Russia.

"People don't want to follow events, they don't want to get information about what's happening on the battlefield," he told AFP.

"There's been a continuous desire to cut down the flow of bad news, to filter it out somehow, not to discuss it with relatives or friends. Perhaps that's where this surge in interest in culture comes from."

He added, however, that the mindset also chimes with the line being put out by the authorities -- that life in Russia continues as normal, despite the war.

"Festivals, parties, concerns -- it reflects the authorities' policy that life goes on. They fight somewhere over there, and here we live our lives without worry," Volkov said.

Outside of the Chagall exhibition in Moscow, former piano teacher Irina refutes the idea of trying to escape from the war.

In her short fur coat and bright pink lips, she said she is well aware of "everything that's happening in the world, and where black and white lie."

"We live with it, yes, we live with it," she said. "We often go to all the exhibitions that nourish us and lift our spirits."

F.Carrillo--TFWP