#Igor Shishkin
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Stribog, Master of the Winds, 2014 - oil on canvas.
— Andrey Alekseyevich Shishkin (Russia, 1960).
Stribog is traditionally considered the bozhich of wind or air. “The Tale of Igor's Polk” informs about the connection of Stribog with the air element: ‘The winds, Stribog's grandsons, blow arrows from the sea to the brave Igor's regiments’.
#slavic culture#slavic folklore#slavic#slavic mythology#slavic polytheism#slavic folk#slavic art#slavs#stribog#stribog deity#Стрибог#Стрибогъ#russian art#folk art#art#artwork#artists on tumblr#modern art#oil painting#paintings#painting#mythology art#not my art#mythology#folklore#mythology and folklore#andrey sishkin
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Hilda Belcher, americana (1881 - 1963 Magnífico Luto, Um dia chuvoso).
Hiroshige II (1826 - 1869 Éclaircie à Sekiya Village, novembre 1861).
Hiroshige II (1826 - 1869 ) - Paysage d'une ville prospère en Amérique, 1861.
Hiroshige II (1826 - 1869 ) - Pluie nocturne au pont de Makura, novembre 1861.
Hiroshige II (1826 - 1869 ) - Sanctuaire de Yushima, 1862.
Holger Jerichau (1861-1900) - A State Elephant at the Raja, Benares, nd..
Holmfirth Bamforth & Co - Now they'll blame me for this, 1910.
Honoré Daumier - ça n'est rien Éléonore…ca n'est rien… , 1857.
Hubert Robert (1733-1808), Wäscherinnen unter einem Brückenbogen.
Hugh Goldwin Rivière (1869 - 1956),
Hyacinthe Rigaud(Werkstatt) (1659-1743), Louis de France, Duc de Bourgogne.
Igor Grabar (1871–1960), The Frost (Иней), 1905.
Ilya Repin – Shy Peasant. 1877.
Ilya Repin, Vera and Pégase, 1844.
Ilya Repin. Barge Haulers on the Volga (1870-73).
Isaac Israels - A praia, Viareggio, 1920.
Isaac Israëls - Sob o guarda-sol, Oosterpark, Amsterdão, 1897.
Isaac Israëls (1865-1934) - Na praia, sd.
Isaac Israëls (1865-1934) - Praia com figuras e guarda-sóis, s.d.
Isaac Israëls (1865-1934) - Retrato da Sra. D. Calisch-Hijmans Kröller, s.d.
Isidore VERHEYDEN (belga 1846-1905) - Mulheres elegantes na praia.
Isidoro Marín Garés, Espanhol (1863 - 1926).
Ivan Aivazovsky, Frozen Bosphorus Under Snow.
Ivan Aivazovsky, Moonlit Night in Crimea, 1859.
Ivan Aivazovsky, Mountain Village Gunib in Dagestan, View from the East, 1869.
Ivan Aivazovsky, Windmills in the Ukrainian steppe at sunset.
Ivan Shishkin - Caminhada na floresta, 1869.
J. M. W. Turner (1775–1851), Light and Colour (Goethe's Theory) – The Morning after the Deluge – Moses Writing the Book of Genesis, 1843.
Jacob Jordaens, Portrait of the artist with his family, circa 1621.
Jacob Jordaens, Return of the Holy Family from Egypt, circa 1616.
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Support Igor Shishkin, Anti-Fascist Prisoner
In the run-up to July 25th (which is the #j25antifa International Day of Solidarity with Anti-Fascist Prisoners), we’ll be profiling a different anti-fascist prisoner every day. Here’s #15:
Igor Shishkin is one of seven anti-fascists arrested by the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) in the past year. The FSB planted weapons and explosives in some of their vehicles, and tortured them in pre-trial detention–beating them, hanging them upside down, electrocuting them, and threatening them with even worse. This torture was used to forced the arrestees to validate forged testimony professing that they are part of an alleged terrorist “network.” All are facing up to a decade in prison.
You can write to Igor here:
Shishkin Igor Dmitrievich, 1991 SIZO-3 FSIN 191123 Russia Saint-Petersburg Shpalernaya str. h.25 RUSSIA
Please note: Moscow ABC advises that letters in English are seldom accepted in Russian prisons, so please write only in Russian (try using a translation program), or just send photos and postcards.
#J25Antifa#igor shishkin#antifa#solidarity is our weapon#antifascist#antifascism#antiracist#antiracism
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Viktor Filinkov: The Big Picture
Viktor Filinkov: The Big Picture
Viktor Filinkov, political prisoner: “An idealist who takes on responsibility for the big picture” People and Nature July 4, 2020
While Black Lives Matter demonstrators fill the streets of cities around the world, opening a new chapter in the history of anti-racist and anti-fascist struggle, the Russian anti-fascists Viktor Filinkov and Yuli Boyarshinov are starting long jail sentences.
A St…
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#"terrorist community"#Andrei Chernov#Arman Sagynbayev#Bumaga (news website)#Dmitry Pchelintsev#FSB#Igor Shishkin#Igor Shiskin#Ilya Shakursky#Network Case#Penza-Petersburg "terrorism" case#Public Monitoring Commission#Russian anarchists#Russian antifascists#torture#Viktor Filinkov#Vitaly Cherkasov#Yuli Boyarshinov
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#Russia NT#Denis Glushakov#Roman Shishkin#Ilya Kutepov#Ruslan Kambolov#Georgi Dzhikiya#Igor Smolnikov#Dmitri Tarasov#Guilherme#Fyodor Smolov
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On the Attack against the FSB in Russia: Including the Statement from the Anarchist Who Carried It Out
A year ago, the Russian Federal Security Service—the FSB—initiated a wave of repression, arresting and brutally torturing anarchists in order to force them to sign false statements admitting to participating in a supposed terrorist group invented by the Russian authorities. The ensuing crackdowns put tremendous pressure on anarchists around Russia; you can learn more about the cases and solidarity efforts here. Today, a young Russian anarchist died in an attack on the FSB headquarters in Arkhangelsk. The FSB has gotten its wish, bullying young Russians into carrying out bombings rather than engaging in public organizing. Below, we present a rough translation of the initial report from Russian anarchists, including the young man’s personal claim of responsibility.
As we have previously emphasized, we don’t believe that individual attacks on specific authority figures will suffice to abolish the institutional power of the state and capitalism. But the Russian state has left precious few alternatives for those who desire a means of bringing about positive change. At the conclusion of a week that has seen a tremendous upswing in authoritarian repression and fascist violence around the world, from Pittsburgh to Brazil, it is time for us to discuss how we can collectively respond to the escalating violence of the state and its fascist supporters.
It also bears mentioning that the FSB is directly descended from the KGB, showing the continuity of oppression between state socialism and capitalism.
We respectfully bid farewell to this young man who took a stand against repression, torture, and deceit, doing the best he could with the few options that were available to him. Let’s organize together to give people like him a reason to live. Please go to the support page for those targeted by the FSB operation.
Visual survey report on the torture that the FSB inflicted on arrestee Igor Shishkin, from the Public Monitoring Commission findings.
From bo-ak.org:
At 8:52 am, at the entrance to the FSB Directorate for the Arkhangelsk Region, an explosion took place. The anarchist rebel, Zhlobitsky Mikhail Vasilyevich, also known on the app Telegram as Valerian Panov, blew himself up. This is the first case of anarchists carrying out such an attack on the FSB in 19 years; the previous attack was organized in 1999 at the reception of the FSB in Moscow by the New Revolutionary Alternative organization.
The comrade died as a result of the explosion, also causing injuries of varying severity to three officers of the FSB.
Seven minutes before the explosion, Valerian left a message in one of the anarchist chats via Telegram, in which he described the reasons for his action:
Comrades, now in the FSB building in Arkhangelsk there will be a terrorist attack, the responsibility for which I take upon myself. The reasons are clear to you. Since the FSB fabricates cases and tortures people, I decided to go for it. Most likely, I will die because of the explosion, because I have initiated the charge directly by pressing the button attached to the bomb cover. Therefore, you are requested to spread information about the terrorist attack: who committed it and what the reasons were.
Well, sort of like everything. I wish you to go unswervingly and uncompromisingly towards our goal. Light to you, the future of anarchist communism!
We bow our heads before the heroism of our comrade. We were not acquainted in person, but through communication, he left an impression of himself as an intelligent and well-prepared person who was not apathetic, who aspired to go beyond the swamp of the official opposition struggle that is now mainstream.
We are sorry that he had no other choice, no way to do more damage to the enemy with less harm to himself.
Yet be that as it may, he lived as he thought was right, and died as a hero in the struggle for our common ideals.
As the Kurds say—Şehid namirin! Heroes do not die!
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Ilya Kapustin, a 27-year-old industrial climber in St. Petersburg, Russia, says he’s not sure if he was arrested or kidnapped one cold night in January when he was thrown into a minibus while on his way home.
It was around 9:30 p.m. and Kapustin was walking from driving school when he claims he was snatched off the street a block from his house and thrown into the bus. In the vehicle, he said he was confronted by five men who joked that they were the “special service officers of the minivan.” Kapustin suspects they were members of the Russian Federal Security Service, also known as the FSB.
During the following three-and-a-half hours, Kapustin claims the men tortured him with an electrical cattle prod while questioning him about an acquaintance from work.
“I was thrown into the minibus, put on the floor and handcuffed with my arms behind my back,” Kapustin described to Newsweek from the safety of neighboring Finland, where he is now living. “Then the car started, and the entire time the car was moving I was tortured with an electric shocker. They demanded answers to their questions while one of them stood on my feet, pressing them to the floor, and a second man used the electrical shocker on my abdomen, hips and groin.”
After torturing him, Kapustin claims his captors brought him to the FSB’s office for questioning and then later to his house, which the police searched. He didn’t see the faces of the men who tortured him, but he said the men who beat him and electrocuted him in the van were the same people who questioned him at the police station. In the FSB's office, the officers threatened to break his legs and kill him. But he was released soon after without being charged.
Kapustin says he was tortured because of his friendship with young, anti-fascist anarchists in Russia, and because of his own history of activism. Throughout the years, he participated in environmental protection projects, distributed food to the needy and joined anti-war protests, he says. He had plans to move south to start an agricultural cooperative. But those plans were cut short after his experience with the FSB. Today, he says he is too afraid to return to Russia, where a handful of young, left-wing activists are still being held in prison and are accusing the FSB of torture.
“They are charged with participation in a terrorist group. I would have to see the evidence against them to know if the charges are true, but given the quite credible torture allegations it’s likely the government doesn’t have sufficient evidence against them,” Tanya Lokshina, a Russia-based researcher with Human Rights Watch who has been following the cases, told Newsweek. “Torture is quite common in Russia, and it generally happens in those cases when they don’t have sufficient evidence. So torture is used to force an individual to incriminate himself and provide evidence about others.”
Russia's FSB formed in the 1990s as the successor of the Soviet-era KGB. Its main headquarters are located in the secretive building on Moscow's Lubyanka square that once housed the Soviet security services, but its officers operate in virtually every part of the country. The FSB also has close ties to Russian President Vladimir Putin, who ran the agency before entering politics.
Responsible for all types of counterintelligence, antiterrorism and surveillance activities, the FSB has numerous tasks that can include apprehending spies or harassing domestic activists. Many have accused the security agency of torture and coercion, particularly in far-flung regions of the North Caucasus like Chechnya and Dagestan, where the majority of the population is Muslim. The most high-profile example is that of Alexei Mikheyev, who in 2006 won a case against the Russian government in the European Court of Human Rights. Mikheyev said the FSB used electric shocks and beatings to force him to confess to the rape of a 17-year-old girl.
Since then, experts say the FSB's longstanding practice of using torture hasn't abated, and that groups are increasingly being targeted in larger western cities like Moscow and St. Petersburg.
“The government has been targeting all sorts of independent groups. I cannot say whether these individuals are involved in any illegal activity. But in this case of St. Petersburg and Penza, all of these young people are connected somehow,” Lokshina described.
In October and November last year, five individuals were arrested in the small city of Penza in southwest Russia. One of the men is under house arrest and the remainder are still in jail. Four more were arrested in St. Petersburg a few months later. Of that group, only Kapustin has been set free. All of the youth maintain their innocence and claim they were tortured while in detention.
Meanwhile, the St. Petersburg Public Oversight Commission, an independent body with permission to enter the city’s prisons, issued a public report after visiting two of the men arrested in St. Petersburg, Viktor Filinkov and Igor Shishkin, and said there was credible evidence of torture. After visiting him in prison, Filinkov's lawyer, Vitaly Cherkov, posted on his Facebook page that he had never seen injuries like the ones sustained by Filinkov during his time in detention. Through their lawyers and family members, the activists describe being shocked with electric cattle prods, beaten and hung upside-down. Filinkov’s wife, Alexandra, who asked that her surname be omitted for her safety, says her husband is innocent and that his rights are being violated.
“My husband held anti-fascist positions, he opposed any kind of oppression, went to meetings, supported trade unions and anti-fascist initiatives, advocated for free internet,” Alexandra told Newsweek.
“He was arrested on January 27, 2018. He was in the special facility of the FSB until March, when he was suddenly transferred to the Gorelovo detention center. That prison is famous for its overcrowding, lawlessness and torture. At the same time, neither his lawyer nor I were informed about the transfer,” Alexandra continued. The oversight commission’s report also claimed that Filinkov had burns from electric shocks on his body and abrasions on his chin.
The FSB claims the detainees are part of a terrorist network of anarchists with cells in St. Petersburg, Penza, Moscow and in neighboring Belarus, but no arrests have been reported in the latter two locations. They also say the group was planning to stage an uprising during the upcoming World Cup, which will be held in Russia in June and July. The FSB did not respond to Newsweek's questions about whether the allegations of torture would be investigated.
Meanwhile, the St. Petersburg oversight committee and human rights groups are calling for an investigation. The oversight committee's report recommends that a full, transparent and comprehensive investigation be conducted into the alleged torture of Filinkov and Shishkin, and that their safety be guaranteed.
"In this particular case, our main message is that the allegations sound very weighty and should be investigated," said Human Rights Watch's Lokshina. "Torture allegations are very serious, and they should be looked into. And so far there is no investigation."
#torture tw#russia#antifa#antifascism#anarchism#I've posted about this story before#reblog this and talk about it you fucking tankie cowards
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Leonid Ivashov and Igor Shishkin on what is behind the US defeat in Afghanistan. What are the consequences of the change of power in this country can have for Russia and the world. Why Afghanistan is called the solar plexus of Eurasia.
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All of the Artists in the Venice Biennale
The 57th Venice Biennale, 2017. Photo by Casey Kelbaugh for Artsy.
The 58th Venice Biennale opens to the public on May 11th and runs until November 24, 2019. Here, we share the artists who will be showing in Venice this year, from those who are included in the international exhibition to those who will represent countries in national pavilions in the Giardini, Arsenale, and across the city. (Editor’s note: This article will be updated as new details of the Venice Biennale presentations are announced.)
Artists Showing in National Pavilions at the Giardini
The 57th Venice Biennale, 2017. Photo by Casey Kelbaugh for Artsy.
Australia
Angelica Mesiti
Curated by Juliana Engberg
Austria
Renate Bertlmann
Curated by Felicitas Thun-Hohenstein
Belgium
Jos de Gruyter & Harald Thys
Curated by Anne-Claire Schmitz
Brazil
Bárbara Wagner & Benjamin de Burca
Curated by Gabriel Pérez-Barreiro
Canada
Inuit artist collective Isuma (Zacharias Kunuk, Norman Cohn, Paul Apak, and Pauloosie Qulitalik)
Curated by Asinnajaq, Catherine Crowston, Barbara Fischer, Candice Hopkins, and Josée Drouin-Brisebois
Czech Republic and Slovakia
Stanislav Kolíbal
Curated by Dieter Bogner
Denmark
Larissa Sansour
Curated by Nat Muller
Egypt
Islam Abdullah, Ahmed Chiha, and Ahmed Abdel Karim
Curated by Ahmed Chiha
Finland
Miracle Workers Collective (Maryan Abdulkarim, Khadar Ahmed, Hassan Blasim, Giovanna Esposito Yussif, Sonya Lindfors, Bonaventure Soh Bejeng Ndikung, Leena Pukki, Lorenzo Sandoval, Martta Tuomaala, Christopher L. Thomas, Christopher Wessels, and Suvi West)
Curated by Giovanna Esposito Yussif, Bonaventure Soh Bejeng Ndikung, and Christopher Wessels
France
Laure Prouvost
Curated by Martha Kirszenbaum
Germany
Natascha Süder Happelmann (Natascha Sadr Haghighian)
Curated by Franciska Zólyom
Great Britain
Cathy Wilkes
Curated by Zoe Whitley
Greece
Panos Charalambous, Eva Stefani, and Zafos Xagoraris
Curated by Katerina Tselou
Hungary
Tamás Waliczky
Curated by Zsuzsanna Szegedy-Maszák
Israel
Aya Ben Ron
Curated by Avi Lubin
Japan
Motoyuki Shitamichi, Taro Yasuno, Toshiaki Ishikura, and Fuminori Nousaku
Curated by Hiroyuki Hattori
Korea
Hwayeon Nam, Siren Eun Young Jung, and Jane Jin Kaisen
Curated by Hyunjin Kim
The Netherlands
Remy Jungerman and Iris Kensmil, with works by Stanley Brouwn
Curated by Benno Tempel
Nordic Pavilion
Artist duo Maria Teeri & Janne Nabb, a.k.a. nabbteeri, from Finland; Ane Graff from Norway; and Ingela Ihrman from Sweden
Curated by Piia Oksanen and Leevi Haapala
Poland
Roman Stańczak
Curated by Łukasz Mojsak and Łukasz Ronduda
Romania
Belu-Simion Făinaru, Dan Mihălțianu, and Miklós Onucsán
Curated by Cristian Nae
Russia
Alexander Sokurov and Alexander Shishkin-Hokusai
Curated by Mikhail Piotrovsky, The State Hermitage Museum
Serbia
Djordje Ozbolt
Curated by Nicoletta Lambertucci
Spain
Itziar Okariz and Sergio Prego Curated by Peio Aguirre
Switzerland
Pauline Boudry & Renate Lorenz
Curated by Charlotte Laubard
United States
Martin Puryear
Curated by Brooke Kamin Rapaport
Uruguay
Yamandú Canosa
Curated by David Armengol and Patricia Bentancur
Venezuela (Bolivarian Republic of)
Natalie Rocha Capiello, Ricardo García, Gabriel López, and Nelson Rangelosky
Curated by Oscar Sottillo Meneses
Artists Showing in National Pavilions at the Arsenale
Installation view of work by by Takesada Matsutani at the 57th Venice Biennale, 2017. Photo by Casey Kelbaugh for Artsy.
Albania
Driant Zeneli
Curated by Alicia Knock
Argentina
Mariana Telleria
Curated by Florencia Battiti
Chile
Voluspa Jarpa
Curated by Agustín Pérez Rubio
China (People’s Republic of)
Chen Qi, Feijun, He Xiangyu, and Geng Xue
Curated by Wu Hongliang
Georgia
Anna K.E.
Curated by Margot Norton
Ghana
Felicia Abban, John Akomfrah, El Anatsui, Lynette Yiadom-Boakye, Ibrahim Mahama, and Selasi Awusi Sosu
Curated by Nana Oforiatta Ayim
India
Nandalal Bose, Atul Dodiya, GR Iranna, Rummana Hussain, Jitish Kallat, Shakuntala Kulkarni, and Ashim Purkayastha
Curated by Roobina Karode
Indonesia
Handiwirman Saputra and Syagini Ratna Wulan
Curated by Asmudjo Jono Irianto; co-curated by Yacobus Ari Respati
Ireland
Eva Rothschild
Curated by Mary Cremin
Italy
Enrico David, Chiara Fumai, and Liliana Moro
Curated by Milovan Farronato
Kosovo (Republic of)
Alban Muja
Curated by Vincent Honore
Latvia
Daiga Grantiņa
Curated by Valentinas Klimašauskas and Inga Lāce
Luxembourg
Marco Godinho
Curated by Kevin Muhlen
Madagascar
Joël Andrianomearisoa
Curated by Rina Ralay-Ranaivo and Emmanuel Daydé
Malta
Vince Briffa, Klitsa Antoniou, and Trevor Borg
Curated by Hesperia Iliadou Suppiej
Mexico
Pablo Vargas Lugo
Curated by Magalí Arriola
Peru
Christian Bendayán, Otto Michael, Manuel Rodríguez Lira, Segundo Candiño Rodríguez, and Anonymous popular artificer
Curated by Gustavo Buntinx
Philippines
Mark Justiniani
Curated by Tessa Maria Guazon
Saudi Arabia
Zahrah Al Ghamdi
Curated by Eiman Elgibreen
Singapore
Song-Ming Ang
Curated by Michelle Ho
Slovenia
Marko Peljhan
Curated by Igor Španjol
South Africa (Republic of)
Dineo Seshee Bopape, Tracey Rose, and Mawande Ka Zenzile
Curated by Nkule Mabaso and Nomusa Makhubu
Turkey
İnci Eviner
Curated by Zeynep Öz
Ukraine
Curated by Open Group (Yurii Biley, Pavlo Kovach, Stanislav Turina, and Anton Varga)
United Arab Emirates
Nujoom Alghanem
Curated by Sam Bardaouil and Till Fellrath
Artists Showing in National Pavilions across Venice
Phantom Camp VIII, 2014. Kris Lemsalu Temnikova & Kasela
Falling Upward, 2016. Saad Yagan Kiyan Art
Algeria
Rachida Azdaou, Hamza Bounoua, Amina Zoubir, Mourad Krinah, and Oussama Tabti
Curated by Hellal Mahmoud Zoubir, National Council of Arts and Letters Ministry of Culture
Andorra
Philippe Shangti
Curated by Ivan Sansa and Paolo De Grandis
Antigua and Barbuda
Timothy Payne, Sir Gerald Price, Joseph Seton, and Frank Walter; Intangible Cultural, Heritage Artisans, and Mas Troup
Curated by Barbara Paca with Nina Khrushcheva
Armenia
“ArtlabYerevan” Artistic Group (Gagik Charchyan, Hovhannes Margaryan, Arthur Petrosyan, and Vardan Jaloyan) and Narine Arakelian
Curated by Susanna Gyulamiryan
Azerbaijan (Republic of)
Zeigam Azizov, Orkhan Mammadov, Zarnishan Yusifova, Kanan Aliyev, and Ulviyya Aliyeva
Curated by Giovanni Mercurio and Emin Mammadov
Bangladesh (People’s Republic of)
Bishwajit Goswami, Dilara Begum Jolly, Heidi Fosli, Nafis Ahmed Gazi, Franco Marrocco, Domenico Pellegrino, Preema Nazia Andaleeb, Ra Kajol, and Uttam Kumar
Curated by Mokhlesur Rahman and Viviana Vannucci
Belarus (Republic of)
Konstantin Selikhanov
Curated by Olga Rybchinskaya
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Danica Dakić
Curated by Anja Bogojević, Amila Puzić, and Claudia Zini
Bulgaria
Rada Boukova and Lazar Lyutakov
Curated by Vera Mlechevska
Catalonia
David Bestué, Marcel Borràs, Albert Garcia-Alzórriz, Tiziano Schürch, and Dolors Magallón
Curated by Pedro Azara
Croatia
Igor Grubić
Curated by Katerina Gregos
Cuba
Alejandro Campins, Alex Hérnandez, Ariamna Contino, and Eugenio Tibaldi
Curated by Margarita Sanchez Prieto
Cyprus
Christoforos Savva (1924–1968)
Curated by Jacopo Crivelli Visconti
Dominican (Republic)
Dario Oleaga, Ezequiel Taveras, Hulda Guzmán, Julio Valdez, Miguel Ramirez, Rita Bertrecchi, Nicola Pica, and Marraffa & Casciotti
Curated by Marianne de Tolentino, Simone Pieralice, and Giovanni Verza
Estonia
Kris Lemsalu
Curated by Andrew Berardini, Irene Campolmi, Sarah Lucas, and Tamara Luuk
Grenada
Amy Cannestra, Billy Gerard Frank, Dave Lewis, Shervone Neckles, Franco Rota Candiani, Roberto Miniati, and CRS avant-garde (Carlo Caldara, Paolo Rossetto, and Giovanni Scagnoli)
Curated by Daniele Radini Tedeschi
Guatemala
Elsie Wunderlich and Marco Manzo
Curated by Stefania Pieralice
Haiti
Jean Ulrick Désert
Curated by Giscard Bouchotte
Hong Kong
Shirley Tse
Curated by Christina Li
Iceland
Shoplifter (Hrafnhildur Arnardóttir)
Curated by Birta Guðjónsdóttir
Iran (Islamic Republic of)
Reza Lavassani, Samira Alikhanzadeh, and Ali Meer Azimi
Curated by Ali Bakhtiari
Iraq
Serwan Baran
Curated by Tamara Chalabi and Paolo Colombo
Ivory Coast
Ernest Dükü, Ananias Leki Dago, Valérie Oka, and Tong Yanrunan
Curated by Massimo Scaringella
Kiribati
Kaeka Michael Betero, Daniela Danica Tepes, Kairaken Betio Group; Teroloang Borouea, Neneia Takoikoi, Tineta Timirau, Teeti Aaloa, Kenneth Ioane, Kaumai Kaoma, Runita Rabwaa, Obeta Taia, Tiribo Kobaua, Tamuera Tebebe, Rairauea Rue, Teuea Kabunare, Tokintekai Ekentetake, Katanuti Francis, Mikaere Tebwebwe, Terita Itinikarawa, Kaeua Kobaua, Raatu Tiuteke, Kaeriti Baanga, Ioanna Francis, Temarewe Banaan, Aanamaria Toom, Einako Temewi, Nimei Itinikarawa, Teniteiti Mikaere, Aanibo Bwatanita, and Arin Tikiraua
Curated by Kautu Tabaka and Nina Tepes
Lithuania
Rugilė Barzdžiukaitė, Vaiva Grainyte, and Lina Lapelyte
Curated by Lucia Pietroiusti
Malaysia
Anurendra Jegadeva, H.H.Lim, Ivan Lam, and Zulkifli Yusoff
Curated by Lim Wei-Ling Esme
Mongolia
Jantsankhorol Erdenebayar, traditional Mongolian throat singers, and Carsten Nicolai
Curated by Gantuya Badamgarav
Montenegro
Vesko Gagović
Curated by Petrica Duletić
Mozambique (Republic of)
Gonçalo Mabunda, Mauro Pinto, and Filipe Branquinho
Curated by Lidija K. Khachatourian
New Zealand
Dane Mitchell
Curated by Zara Stanhope and Chris Sharp
North Macedonia (Republic of)
Nada Prlja
Curated by Jovanka Popova
Pakistan
Naiza Khan
Curated by Zahra Khan
Portugal
Leonor Antunes
Curated by João Ribas
San Marino (Republic of)
Gisella Battistini, Martina Conti, Gabriele Gambuti, Giovanna Fra, Thea Tini, Chen Chengwei, Li Geng, Dario Ortiz, Tang Shuangning, Jens W. Beyrich, Xing Junqin, Xu de Qi, and Sebastián
Curated by Vincenzo Sanfo
Scotland
Charlotte Prodger
Curated by Linsey Young with Cove Park (artist residency)
Seychelles (Republic of)
George Camille and Daniel Dodin
Curated by Martin Kennedy
Syrian Arab (Republic)
Abdalah Abouassali, Giacomo Braglia, Ibrahim Al Hamid, Chen Huasha, Saed Salloum, Xie Tian, Saad Yagan, Primo Vanadia, and Giuseppe Biasio
Curated by Emad Kashout
Taiwan
Shu Lea Cheang
Curated by Paul B. Preciado
Thailand
Somsak Chowtadapong, Panya Vijinthanasarn, and Krit Ngamsom
Curated by Tawatchai Somkong
Wales
Sean Edwards
Curated by Marie-Anne McQuay
Zimbabwe (Republic of)
Raphael Chikukwa
Curated by Georgina Maxim, Neville Starling, Cosmos Shiridzinomwa, and Kudzanai Violet Hwami
“May You Live In Interesting Times”
These artists are featured in “May You Live In Interesting Times,” the 58th Venice Biennale’s International Art Exhibition at the Giardini and the Arsenale, curated by Ralph Rugoff.
The 57th Venice Biennale, 2017. Photo by Casey Kelbaugh for Artsy.
Lawrence Abu Hamdan, b. 1985, Jordan. Lives and works in Beirut.
Njideka Akunyili Crosby, b. 1983, Nigeria. Lives and works in Los Angeles.
Halil Altındere, b. 1971, Turkey. Lives and works in Istanbul.
Michael Armitage, b. 1984, Kenya. Lives and works in London and Nairobi.
Korakrit Arunanondchai, b. 1986, Thailand. Lives and works in New York and Bangkok.
Alex Gvojic, b. 1984, United States. Lives and works in New York.
Ed Atkins, b. 1982, United Kingdom. Lives and works in Berlin and Copenhagen.
Tarek Atoui, b. 1980, Lebanon. Lives and works in Paris.
Darren Bader, b. 1978, United States. Lives and works in New York and elsewhere.
Nairy Baghramian, b. 1971, Iran. Lives and works in Berlin.
Neïl Beloufa, b. 1985, France. Lives and works in Paris.
Alexandra Bircken, b. 1967 Germany. Lives and works in Berlin.
Carol Bove, b. 1971, Switzerland. Lives and works in New York.
Christoph Büchel, b. 1966, Switzerland. Lives and works in Reykjavik and Basel.
Ludovica Carbotta, b. 1982, Italy. Lives and works in Barcelona.
Antoine Catala, b. 1975, France. Lives and works in New York.
Ian Cheng, b. 1984, United States. Lives and works in New York.
George Condo, b. 1957, United States. Lives and works in New York.
Alex Da Corte, b. 1980, United States. Lives and works in Philadelphia.
Jesse Darling, b. 1981 United Kingdom. Lives and works in London and Berlin.
Stan Douglas, b. 1960, Canada. Lives and works in Vancouver.
Jimmie Durham, b. 1940, United States. Lives and works in Berlin.
Nicole Eisenman, b. 1965, France. Lives and works in New York.
Haris Epaminonda, b. 1980, Republic of Cyprus. Lives and works in Berlin.
Lara Favaretto, b. 1973, Italy. Lives and works in Turin.
Cyprien Gaillard, b. 1980, France. Lives and works in Berlin.
Gauri Gill, b. 1970, India. Lives and works in New Delhi.
Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster, b. 1965, France. Lives and works in Paris.
Joi Bittle, b. 1975, United States. Lives and works in New York.
Shilpa Gupta, b. 1976, India. Lives and works in Mumbai.
Soham Gupta, b. 1988, India. Lives and works in Kolkata.
Martine Gutierrez, b. 1989, United States. Lives and works in New York.
Rula Halawani, b. 1964, Palestine. Lives and works in Jerusalem.
Anthea Hamilton, b. 1978, United Kingdom. Lives and works in London.
Jeppe Hein, b. 1974, Denmark. Lives and works in Berlin.
Anthony Hernandez, b. 1947, United States. Lives and works in Los Angeles and Idaho.
Tsuyoshi Hisakado, b. 1981, Japan. Lives and works in Kyoto.
Ryoji Ikeda, b. 1966, Japan. Lives and works in Paris and Kyoto.
Arthur Jafa, b. 1960, United States. Lives and works in Los Angeles.
Cameron Jamie, b. 1969, United States. Lives and works in Paris and Cologne.
Kahlil Joseph, b. 1981, United States. Lives and works in Los Angeles.
Zhanna Kadyrova, b. 1981, Ukraine. Lives and works in Kyiv.
Suki Seokyeong Kang, b. 1977, Republic of Korea. Lives and works in Seoul.
Mari Katayama, b. 1987, Japan. Lives and works in Gunma.
Lee Bul, b. 1964, Republic of Korea. Lives and works in Seoul.
Liu Wei , b. 1972, People’s Republic of China. Lives and works in Beijing.
Maria Loboda, b. 1979, Poland. Lives and works in Berlin.
Andreas Lolis, b. 1970, Albania. Lives and works in Athens.
Christian Marclay, b. 1955, United States. Lives and works in London.
Teresa Margolles, b. 1963, Mexico. Lives and works in Mexico City and Madrid.
Julie Mehretu, b. 1970, Ethiopia. Lives and works in New York.
Ad Minoliti, b. 1980, Argentina. Lives and works in Buenos Aires.
Jean-Luc Moulène, b. 1955, France. Lives and works in Paris.
Zanele Muholi, b. 1972, Republic of South Africa. Lives and works in Johannesburg, Durban, and Cape Town.
Jill Mulleady, b. 1980, Uruguay. Lives and works in Los Angeles.
Ulrike Müller, b. 1971, Austria. Lives and works in New York.
Nabuqi, b. 1984, People’s Republic of China. Lives and works in Beijing.
Otobong Nkanga, b. 1974, Nigeria. Lives and works in Antwerp.
Khyentse Norbu, b. 1961, Bhutan. Lives and works in India and Bhutan.
Frida Orupabo, b. 1986, Norway. Lives and works in Oslo.
Jon Rafman, b. 1981, Canada. Lives and works in Montreal.
Gabriel Rico, b. 1980, Mexico. Lives and works in Guadalajara.
Handiwirman Saputra, b. 1975, Indonesia. Lives and works in Yogyakarta.
Tomás Saraceno, b. 1973, Argentina. Lives and works in Berlin.
Augustas Serapinas, b. 1990, Lithuania. Lives and works in Vilnius.
Avery Singer, b. 1987, United States. Lives and works in New York.
Slavs and Tatars, Founded in 2006. Based in Berlin.
Michael E. Smith, b. 1977, United States. Lives and works in Providence.
Hito Steyerl, b. 1966, Germany. Lives and works in Berlin.
Tavares Strachan, b. 1979, The Bahamas. Lives and works in New York.
Sun Yuan & Peng Yu, b. 1972, People’s Republic of China; B. 1974, People’s Republic of China. Both live and work in Beijing.
Henry Taylor, b. 1958, United States. Lives and works in Los Angeles.
Rosemarie Trockel, b. 1952, Germany. Lives and works in Cologne.
Kaari Upson, b. 1972, United States. Lives and works in Los Angeles.
Andra Ursuţa, b. 1979, Romania. Lives and works in New York.
Danh Vō, b. 1975, Vietnam. Lives and works in Mexico City
Kemang Wa Lehulere, b. 1984, Republic of South Africa. Lives and works in Cape Town.
Apichatpong Weerasethakul, b. 1970, Thailand. Lives and works in Chiang Mai.
Christine Wertheim & Margaret Wertheim, b. 1958, Australia; b. 1958, Australia. Both live and work in Los Angeles.
Anicka Yi, b. 1971, Republic of Korea. Lives and works in New York.
Yin Xiuzhen, b. 1963, People’s Republic of China. Lives and works in Beijing.
Yu Ji, b. 1985, People’s Republic of China. Lives and works in Shanghai and Vienna.
from Artsy News
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The Network Trial in Petersburg: Closing Statements by the Defendants
The Network Trial in Petersburg: Closing Statements by the Defendants
Network Trial defendant Viktor Filinkov tells a joke: “A programmer, a businessman, and an industrial climber planned to overthrow the government.”
The Penza Case in Petersburg: Closing Statements Mediazona June 18, 2020
The trial of the “Network terrorist community,”whose alleged members have been charged with violating Article 205.4.2 of the Criminal Code, is winding down in Petersburg. The…
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#Anna Tereshkina#closing statement#frame-up#FSB#Igor Shishkin#Mediazona#Network Case#Penza-Petersburg "terrorism" case#show trial#The Network#torture#Viktor Filinkov#Yegor Zorin#Yuli Boyarshinov
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Confederations Cup: Ronaldo strikes as Portugal down Russia
Confederations Cup: Ronaldo strikes as Portugal down Russia
Cristiano Ronaldo brushed off the tax storm clouding his Real Madrid future by scoring the only goal of the game as Portugal beat hosts Russia 1-0 at the Confederations Cup on Wednesday.
The 32-year-old netted after just eight minutes to give the Euro 2016 winners their first victory in Group A as they leapfrog Russia in the standings. Group rivals Mexico and New Zealand meet later in Sochi.
The…
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#Alexander Samedov#Alexander Yerokhin#Ballon D&039;Or#Confederations Cup#Cristiano Ronaldo#EURO 2016#FIFA#FIFA Confederations Cup#Georgy Dzhikia#Igor Akinfeev#Mexico#Moscow#New Zealand#Portugal#Raphael Guerreiro#Real Madrid#Roman Shishkin#Russia#Spartak Moscow#Stanislav Cherchesov
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Russia Sentences Anti-Fascists on Bogus Terror Charges, Critics Say
MOSCOW — A Russian military court on Monday handed down harsh sentences of up to 18 years to seven members of a group of left-wing activists, who in turn accused the authorities of extorting confessions through torture and threats against their families.
Critics said the charges of terrorism were fabricated and that the accused, as in other previous incidents, were entrapped by security agents. They compared the use of torture to extort testimony to the practices used by Soviet security forces during Stalin’s purges in the 1930s and early 1950s.
The seven men, aged 23 to 31, were accused of creating a terrorist organization called “the Network” with the aim of launching terror attacks ahead of the 2018 World Cup soccer tournament in Russia and the presidential election that took place the same year.
The prosecutors said the organization was managed from the Russian provincial city of Penza, where the Monday hearing took place. It also had cells in Moscow, St. Petersburg and in Belarus, said officers of the Federal Security Service, or the F.S.B., who ran the investigation.
All seven men denied the charges. At least four of them initially pleaded guilty, but later switched, contending that their original pleas had been obtained under torture, that there was no such terror group and that prosecutors had invented the name “the Network.”
Their lawyers dismissed the charges as absurd, saying that some members of the putative terrorist group did not know one another, while others were loosely connected through a shooting sport they competed in together and shared leftist, anti-fascist beliefs.
The lawyers said they made videos of the shooting games in a forest, which the prosecutors presented at trial as terrorist training exercises.
Four of the seven said they were brutally beaten and tortured while in custody. In testimony during a court hearing in May, Dmitri Pchelintsev, who the authorities said was the group’s leader, described how the torture sessions were conducted.
“They began to pull down my underwear, in order to attach wires to my genitals,” he said, according to Media Zona, a Russian news website that followed the case closely. “I said: ‘O.K., I understand everything. What was the last question?’ They said: ‘Did you organize a terrorist group called the Network?’ I said: ‘Yes, that was me.’ They said: ‘Good boy, O.K., sit down.’”
Mr. Pchelintsev, 27, was sentenced to 18 years in prison for organizing a terrorist group and firearms possession. Ilya Shakursky, 23, who was sentenced to 16 years, also claimed he was tortured while in custody with security agents subjecting him to electric shocks after putting a sock in his mouth, according to his testimony. The F.S.B. denied any physical violence had been used against the two.
At earlier trials, members of the group who pleaded guilty were given much shorter sentences. Igor Shishkin, 27, received 3.5 years. Prison doctors and rights advocates said his body showed signs of torture.
Asked about the case on Monday, Dmitri S. Peskov, the spokesman for President Vladimir V. Putin, said the Russian leader had ordered his subordinates to examine the case and that it would not be appropriate for him to intervene any further.
“The president has repeatedly looked into this situation and repeatedly ordered everything to be checked thoroughly to make sure everything is in line with the law,” said Mr. Peskov.
Aleksei A. Navalny, Mr. Putin’s most prominent critic, described the sentences as “horrific” in a post on Twitter.
“These very young people’s testimonies about an imaginary terrorist organization were beaten out of them using torture,” said Mr. Navalny. “Any minister in the Russian government is 10 times more of a criminal and a threat to society than these guys.”
The tactics used by the security forces in this case were part of a familiar pattern, critics said.
In 2018, Russian law enforcement arrested members of a group prosecutors called New Greatness, a small cell that the authorities said was plotting to overthrow the government. Lawyers for the accused and rights advocates dismissed the accusations, saying that the authorities had penetrated a simple chat group and then planted a provocateur inside who steered the conversation toward political subjects.
The critics said that the security agencies and other law enforcement groups face intense pressure to produce results, which could explain why they are reduced to fabricating cases against vulnerable people.
“All counter-extremism agencies have to fight against something all the time,” wrote Ekaterina Schulmann, a political scientist, in an op-ed about the Network case.
“Our citizens do not really want to take part in extremist organizations — this is not our national sport,” she said. “But reports need to be written, so things have to be constructed in order to unveil them later.”
from WordPress https://mastcomm.com/russia-sentences-anti-fascists-on-bogus-terror-charges-critics-say/
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Dota 2 Shuffle: Resumen de Rosters - CIS
El cambio de jugadores en Dota 2, también llamado Roster Shuffle, acaba de cerrarse hace unas horas, por lo que tenemos ya una idea de los cambios más importantes de la escena de CIS hasta el día de hoy:
EQUIPOS FINALIZADOS
TEAM EMPIRE
Tras un buen desempeño en el TI7, los rusos han perdido a RodjER, y como su reemplazo han logrado fichar a VANSKOR, que será su nuevo capitán y posición 5, tras dejar su periodo de inactividad en su último equipo, Team Spirit.
Entra Sale Vladimir “Chappie” Kuzmenko Rostislav “fn” Lozovoi Andrey “Ghostik” Kadyk Yaroslav “Miposhka” Naidenov Vladimir “RodjER” Nikogosyan Ivan “VANSKOR” Skorokhod (C)
Imagen cortesía de Wykrhm Reddy.
NATUS VINCERE
En un nuevo intento de Natus Vincere por volver a los puestos de avanzada, han sacado a Pajkatt y Biver, los dos miembros no-CIS que tenía el equipo, y han fichado a RodjER, ex Team Empire, y a un Hard Carry más bien desconocido para la escena, Crystallize, quien tuvo un breve paso por el equipo Double Dimension.
Entra Sale Vladislav “Crystallize” Krystanek Per Olsson “Pajkatt” Lille Danil “Dendi” Ishutin Victor “GeneRaL” Nigrini Vladimir “RodjER” Nikogosyan Malthe “Biver” Winther Akbar “SoNNeikO” Butaev (C)
Imagen cortesía de Wykrhm Reddy.
SPARTAK ESPORTS
Uniendose a la gran cantidad de organizaciones deportivas que entran en el mundo de los esports está Sparkat Esports, división del Sparkat de Moscú, uno de los más importantes clubes de Rusia. Ellos han armado un equipo bien interesante, con talentos como BZZ y yoky-, junto a varios jugadores prometedores de la nueva camada de CIS.
Entra Sale Egor “.Ark” Zhabotinskii Stanislav “633” Glushan Maxim “yoky-“ Kim Evgeniy “Chuvash” Makarov Mikhail “Misha” Agatov (C)
M19
La división de Dota 2 de M19 data sólo desde mayo de este año, y pese al poco tiempo, han mostrado un buen nivel en varias clasificatorias donde han estado presentes. El equipo ha sufrido un par de cambios importantes desde su formación, perdiendo al Midlaner y al Capitán del equipo, iLTW y Misha respectivamente. En su reemplazo, han fichado a Pikachu, quien es hermano gemelo de Iceberg, el también Midlaner de Team Spirit, y a un desconocido jugador cuyo nickname es Aoharide.
Entra Sale Alexander “Nix” Levin Yaroslav “Pikachu” Vasilenko Igor “iLTW” Filatov Gleb “Funn1k” Lipatnikov Albert “Aoharide” Garayev Mikhail “Misha” Agatov (C) Nikolay “Muriel” Baykov (C)
TEAM SPIRIT
Tras varios intentos fallidos por clasificar a torneos importantes, entre ellos el TI7 po supuesto, Team Spirit decidió enviar a banca a su Hard Carry y su Hard Support, BZZ y VANSKOR, quienes finalmente terminaron dejando la organización. En su reemplazo, han traído de M19 a iLTW y al ex Natus Vincere, Biver.
Entra Sale Igor “iLTW” Filatov Stanislav “633” Glushan Bogdan “Iceberg” Vasilenko Alexander “DkPhobos” Kucheria Artyom “fng” Barshack (C) Malthe “Biver” Winther Ivan “VANSKOR” Skorokhod
EFFECT
Creemos que Effect es uno de los equipos Tier 2 que más se ha potenciado, gracias a la llegada de dos veteranos de CIS. Nos referimos a Sedoy, que llega a la posición 1 en reemplazo de Maden, y a Mag~, quien viene de regreso tras su aventura poco exitosa en la región de SEA, y reemplazará al joven jugador nongrata en la posición 3. Ambos jugadores cuentan con la experiencia suficiente para mejorar al equipo y llevarlo a mejores lugares dentro de las clasificatorias regionales.
Entra Sale Vadim “Sedoy” Musorin Igor “Maden” Andreevich Andrey “Afoninje” Afonin Andrey “Mag~” Chipenko Aleksey “nongrata” Vasiliev Arsenij “ArsZeeqq” Usov (C) Rinat “KingR” Abdullin
DOUBLE DIMENSION
DD al igual que Effect, es otro de los equipos Tier 2 que se ha potenciado con veteranos y conocidos jugadores de la escena CIS, en desmedro de otros jugadores más nuevos y de menor renombre. El ex Capitán de Elements, LebronDota, junto al ex Empire y VP, NoFear, serán la nueva pareja de Supports. Quien sí es desconocido, al menos para la gran mayoría de fanáticos, es su nuevo Hard Carry, apodado Rajjix.
Entra Sale Roy “Rajjix” Rajji Ramazan “B7” Kudaybergen Dmitry “UnderShock” Bolshakov Alexander “Flow” Sazonov Nikola “LeBronDota” Popovic (C) Yakiv “dark” Hrabar Alexander “NoFear” Churochkin Evgeniy “Женя” Kuznetsov
VEGA SQUADRON
Vega no ha realizado una publicación oficial en sus redes sociales, pero ya lleva jugando al menos tres clasificatorias distintas con Zayac, un muy buen Roaming Support con alto MMR, que ha tomado el lugar de Silent, de quien no sabemos su situación actual. Además, Zayac ha sido inscrito como miembro oficial en el la página de registro para la temporada, lo que indicaría que este cambio es permanente, y Silent podría haber sido dejado en banca, o bien haber salido de la organización.
Entra Sale Ilya “thereayou” Korobkin Sergey “G” Bragin Vasily “AfterLife” Shishkin Bakyt “W_Zayac” Emilzhanov Airat “Silent” Gaziev Semion “Slayer” Krivulya (C)
COMANCHE
Comanche ha sido uno de los pocos de la región que ha decidido llevar la renovación de su equipo al extremo, dropeando a cada uno de los anteriores miembros del roster. Para su nueva escuadra, han reclutado a algunos experimentados jugadores, entre los que destacan Maden y Shachlo.
Entra Sale Igor “Maden” Andreevich Vyachslav “Oxaien” Brykov Denis “Ryūjin” Trofimov Vlad “GGwpLanaya” Malikov Maxim “Shachlo” Abramovskikh Evgeny “XaKoH” Kochetov Sergey “EcNart” Slobodyanyk Khaled “sQreen” El-Khabbash Ilyas “1ls.” Ganeev Gleb “hNN)” Shilov
Como podemos ver, hay muchos cambios para una interesante clasificatoria regional, cuyo mejor exponente de los últimos tiempos, Virtus.Pro espera poder seguir dominando con su mismo roster de la temporada anterior. Al menos algo es seguro, la competencia estará mejor que en temporadas anteriores.
¿Cuál ha sido tu alineación favorita de esta nueva temporada? Déjanos tu comentario.
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Prediksi Skor Meksiko vs Rusia 24 Juni 2017 , Jadwal Piala Konfederasi Sabtu ini
KABAR BOLA- Prediksi Skor Meksiko vs Rusia 24 Juni 2017 , Jadwal Piala Konfederasi Sabtu ini – Piala Konfederasi match day terakhir Di Grup A, Meksiko dan Rusia akan mengincar kemenangan saat keduanya bertemu untuk meraih tiket semi final dimana laga akan berlangsung pada Sabtu malam pukul 22:00 WIB dari Kazan Arena.
Dengan Portugal hampir pasti untuk mendapatkan setidaknya satu poin melawan Selandia Baru, game ini memiliki nuansa babak perempat final dengan pemenangnya maju ke empat besar. Hasil imbang saja akan membawa Meksiko yang lolos, tapi mereka terlihat mampu meraih tiga poin kala menghadapi tuan rumah Rusia yang tidak meyakinkan.
Negara tuan rumah berhasil mengalahkan Kiwi dalam pertandingan pembuka mereka namun kalah 1-0 dari Portugal dilaga kedua dan tidak terlihat seperti mereka dalam kondisi bagus saat mereka bersiap untuk menjadi tuan rumah turnamen terbesar sepanjang musim panas mendatang. Mereka baru saja memenangkan 4 dari 17 laga internasional terakhir mereka, yang sebenarnya bukan pertanda baik saat mereka mendekati pertandingan wajib menang melawan tim Meksiko yang punya semua lini yang lebih baik dari mereka..
Meksiko mungkin tidak terlalu bergantung satu bintang saja namun cukup berpengalaman diturnamen dan bisa selalu lolos dari babak grup. Mereka telah menunjukkan semangat juang tinggi di turnamen ini, selalu ketinggalan dari dua laganya saat bermain imbang dengan Portugal dan mengejar ketertinggal 1-0 di babak pertama menjadi kemenangan 2-1 melawan Selandia Baru.
Mereka berada di puncak grup menuju ke pertandingan ini dan hanya mengalami 2 kekalahan dalam 38 pertandingan terakhir mereka, yang menunjukkan bahwa mereka mampu mendapatkan poin yang mereka butuhkan untuk lolos ke semi final. Laga ini akan berpotensi sangat terbuka karena Rusia harus mengejar 3 poin.
Meksiko akan kembali menggunakan 4 bek setelah dengan formasi 3 bek di babak pertama melawan Selandia Baru gagal. Mereka tanpa Carlos Salcedo yang cedera, sedang Javier Hernandez dan Carlos Vela, yang tak dimainkan dilaga sebelumnya akan memimpin didepan dengan dukungan dari Santos sedang Guardado akan menggalang lini tengah sementara pemain veteran lain Rafa Marquez menjadi kunci lini belakang.
Dengan formasi 3-5-2 Smolov dan Polos akan diandalkan di lini depan dengan Golovin dan Smodov akan menjadi kunci lapangan tengah.
Prediksi laga, Meksiko kami jagokan akan menang dengan skor 2-1.
Perkiraan Susunan Pemain Meksiko vs Rusia : Meksiko (4-2-3-1): José de Jesús Corona, Rafael Márquez, Jorge Torres Nilo, Hugo Ayala, Oswaldo Alanís, Luis Montes, Jesús Dueñas, Elías Hernández, Jesús Molina, Giovani dos Santos, Hirving Lozano
Rusia (5-3-2): Igor Akinfeev, Dmitri Kombarov, Igor Smolnikov, Roman Shishkin, Fyodor Kudryashov, Yuri Zhirkov, Denis Glushakov, Aleksandr Samedov, Aleksandr Golovin, Fyodor Smolov,Dmitry Poloz
Head To Head Meksiko vs Rusia : 02/02/94 Meksiko 1 – 4 Rusia 16/08/92 Rusia 2 – 0 Meksiko
Lima Pertandingan Terakhir Meksiko : 22/06/17 Mexico 2 – 1 New Zealand 18/06/17 Portugal 2 – 2 Mexico 12/06/17 Mexico 1 – 1 United States 09/06/17 Mexico 3 – 0 Honduras 02/06/17 Mexico 3 – 1 Republic of Ireland
Lima Pertandingan Terakhir Rusia : 21/06/17 Russia 0 – 1 Portugal 17/06/17 Russia 2 – 0 New Zealand 09/06/17 Russia 1 – 1 Chile 06/06/17 Hungary 0 – 3 Russia 28/03/17 Russia 3 – 3 Belgium
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New post in News Brasileirão : #Rússia - Akinfeev; Kombarov, Dzhikiia, Vasin, Shishkin e Kudrjasov; Samedov, Glu… https://t.co/K1iDO7a6ty
New post in News Brasileirão : #Rússia - Akinfeev; Kombarov, Dzhikiia, Vasin, Shishkin e Kudrjasov; Samedov, Glu… https://t.co/K1iDO7a6ty
— Igor de Oliveira™ (@IguinhOliver) June 21, 2017
via Twitter https://twitter.com/IguinhOliver June 21, 2017 at 11:57AM
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