#boris victor ivanov
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tmaaov · 7 months ago
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@killserj art
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beautifulrosebrunette · 8 months ago
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Posting this as well!
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byneddiedingo · 10 months ago
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Valéry Inkijinoff in Storm Over Asia (Vsevolod Pudovkin, 1928)
Cast: Valéry Inkijinoff, I. Didintseff, Aleksandr Chistyakov, Victor Tsoppi, Fyodor Ivanov, V. Pro, Boris Barnet, Karl Gurniak, I. Inkizhinov, V. Belinskaya, Anel Sudakevich. Screenplay: Osip Brik, Ivan Novokshenov. Cinematography: Anatoli Golovnya. Art direction: M. Aronson, Sergei Kozlovsky.
The great silent Russian propaganda films depended heavily on two things the nascent Soviet Union had in abundance: faces and landscapes. This reliance on closeups and sweeping views of fields and plains sometimes resulted in a loss of narrative coherence, but put the emphasis on the people and resources that the Bolsheviks needed to exercise control over. Storm Over Asia is no exception, beginning with the windswept land and Asiatic faces of the Mongol peoples of eastern Russia, which at the time depicted in the film was still a vast battleground for the Bolsheviks and European forces. After establishing the location, the film focuses on Bair (Valéry Inkijinoff), a young hunter whose father sends him off to the bazaar to sell a silver fox pelt. In the vividly filmed bazaar, Bair is cheated by an unscrupulous European fur trader (Viktor Tsoppi), who might as well be wearing a label: bourgeois capitalist. Beaten by the henchmen for the trader, Bair escapes and joins a group of Soviet partisans fighting the occupiers. The occupation forces seem to be British, who were never a significant presence in this part of the Soviet Union, but the film is vague about such details. They manage to capture Bair, who is sent out with a soldier to be shot, but when they examine Bair's belongings they discover an ancient document indicating that he's a direct descendant of Genghis Khan. (The original title of the film, in Russian, was The Heir to Genghis Khan.) They find the wounded Bair, restore him to health, and set him up as the puppet ruler of a Mongolian state. In the end, Bair turns against the imperialists and the film concludes with a literal storm sweeping them away. It's a film full of great set-pieces, including a montage mockng the imperialists and their wives as they put on their finery and then are driven on a muddy road to meet the new Grand Lama. After an elaborate ceremony (actually filmed at a Tibetan Buddhist celebration) the lama turns out to be a small boy, not at all impressed with his visitors.   
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mamusiq · 5 years ago
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Marius Petipa 
Maestro Marius Ivanovich Petipa, premier maître de ballet of the St. Petersburg Imperial Theatres. St. Petersburg, 1887.
Born Marius Alphonse Petipa
11 March 1818  Marseille, France
Died 14 July 1910 (aged 92)  Gurzuf, Taurida Governorate, Russian Empire
Nationality French
Education Brussels Conservatory Grand Théâtre de Bordeaux
Known for Ballet, choreography
Marius Ivanovich Petipa (Russian: Ма́риус Ива́нович Петипа́), born Victor Marius Alphonse Petipa (11 March 1818 – 14 July [O.S. 1 July] 1910[1]), was a French ballet dancer, pedagogue and choreographer. Petipa is one of the most influential ballet masters and choreographers in ballet history.
Marius Petipa is noted for his long career as Premier maître de ballet (First Ballet Master) of the St. Petersburg Imperial Theatres, making him Ballet Master and principal choreographer of the Imperial Ballet (today known as the Mariinsky Ballet), a position he held from 1871 until 1903. Petipa created over fifty ballets, some of which have survived in versions either faithful to, inspired by, or reconstructed from the original. Among these works, he is most noted for The Pharaoh's Daughter (1862); Don Quixote (1869); La Bayadère (1877); Le Talisman (1889); The Sleeping Beauty (1890); The Nutcracker (choreographed jointly with Lev Ivanov) (1892); Le Réveil de Flore (1894); La Halte de cavalerie (1896); Raymonda (1898); Les Saisons (1900), and Les Millions d’Arlequin (a.k.a. Harlequinade) (1900).
Petipa revived a substantial number of works created by other choreographers. Many of these revivals would go on to become the definitive editions on which all subsequent productions would be based. The most famous of these revivals were Le Corsaire, Giselle, La Esmeralda, Coppélia, La Fille Mal Gardée (with Lev Ivanov), The Little Humpbacked Horse and Swan Lake (with Lev Ivanov).[1]
Many pieces have survived in an independent form from Petipa's original works and revivals in spite of the fact that the full-length ballets that spawned them had disappeared from the Imperial Ballet's repertoire. Many of these pieces have endured in versions either based on the original or choreographed anew by others – the Grand Pas classique, Pas de trois and Mazurka des enfants from Paquita; Le Carnaval de Venise Pas de deux from Satanella; The Talisman Pas de deux; La Esmeralda Pas de deux; the Diana and Actéon Pas de deux; La Halte de Cavalerie Pas de deux; the Don Quixote Pas de deux; La Fille Mal Gardée Pas de deux; and the Harlequinade Pas de deux.
All of the full-length works and individual pieces which have survived in active performance are considered to be cornerstones of the ballet repertory.
Giselle (revival, after Jean Coralli and J. Perrot). Staged with Jules Perrot. Music by Adolphe Adam and Cesare Pugni. 7 February [O.S. 26 January] 1850.
Le Corsaire (revival, after J. Mazilier). Staged with Jules Perrot. Music by Adolphe Adam and Cesare Pugni. 24 January [O.S. 12 January] 1858.
La Bayadère. Music by Ludwig Minkus. 4 February [O.S. 23 January] 1877
The Sleeping Beauty. Music by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky. 15 January [O.S. 3 January] 1890.
La Sylphide (revival, after F. Taglioni). Music by Jean Madeleine Schneitzhoeffer and Riccardo Drigo. 31 January [O.S. 19 January] 1892.
The Nutcracker. Staged by Petipa and Lev Ivanov. Music by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky. 18 December [O.S. 6 December] 1892.
Cendrillon (as Zolushka). Staged by Lev Ivanov and Enrico Cecchetti under the supervision of Petipa. Music by Baron Boris Fitinhof-Schell. 17 December [O.S. 5 December] 1893.
Swan Lake (revival, after J. Reisinger). Staged with Lev Ivanov. Music by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky in a revision by Riccardo Drigo. 27 January [O.S. 15 January] 1895.
Raymonda. Music by Alexander Glazunov. 19 January [O.S. 7 January] 1898.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marius_Petipa
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cristianoporqueddu · 8 years ago
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Russian Guitar Music è disponibile
Russian Guitar Music è disponibile
Maggio 2017: Brilliant Classics avvia in oltre 40 paesi la distribuzione del cofanetto di quattro volumi “Russian Music for Guitar of the 20th and 21st centuries” dedicato alla musica russa del XX e del XXI secolo per chitarra. Un progetto discografico ideato quasi tre anni fa che ha necessitato di un percorso di approfondimento e di studio che mi ha profondamente arricchito.
La tracklist…
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political-fluffle · 5 years ago
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Tip of the Iceberg
More Connections Between Boris Johnson and Russian Influencers Emerge
While Parliament’s Intelligence and Security Committee report into Russian influence on British public life remains suppressed by the Prime Minister and his advisor Dominic Cummings, Byline Times has uncovered concerning new connections between Boris Johnson and a network of wealthy oligarchs.
After Johnson was elected Mayor of London in 2008, he discontinued the successful Russian Winter Festival which had taken place in London, replacing it instead with a new Russian festival, Maslenitsa. 
Johnson argued that the proposal for the new festival – from a UK-registered company called Ensemble Productions – was already supported by Moscow’s city government, the Russian Embassy, the Russian culture charity Pushkin House and the Russian Speaking Community Council (RSCC). 
The executive director of Pushkin House was Julian Gallant – a Conservative Party activist and the main shareholder in Ensemble Productions. Meanwhile, the CEO of Ensemble Productions was Olga Balakleets – the culture secretary of the RSCC and the wife of Gallant. 
Although the new event was still under the auspices of the Mayor of London’s office at City Hall, Russia would provide the majority of support and funding for it. According to a Freedom of Information request, Johnson annually requested this support from high-ranking Russian officials and instructed them to follow-up with Ensemble Productions directly. This included Russian President Vladimir Putin’s chief of staff, Sergei Ivanov – the architect of Russian interference in the 2016 US Presidential Election – and Yury Lushkov, the long-term Mayor of Moscow.
In 2013, corporate sponsorship for the Maslentisa Festival appears to have gone directly to Ensemble Productions. That year, the company also helped run the Days of Ukraine Festival in London, which was supported by Boris Johnson and organised by the Firtash Foundation.
Dmitri Firtash, who is under US indictment and awaiting extradition from Austria, is a pro-Putin oligarch and a close supporter of the former Ukrainian President Victor Yanukovych, who was ousted in a popular uprising in 2013, after he backtracked on a pledge to tie the country more closely to Europe than Russia. (…)
A few weeks later, as the Brexit debate was at its height, Johnson’s position on the annexation of Crimea by Russia began to align more closely with the Kremlin. “If you want an example of EU foreign policy-making on the hoof, and the EU’s pretensions to running a defence policy that have caused real trouble, then look at what has happened in Ukraine,” he said. (…) 
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junker-town · 7 years ago
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2018 World Juniors rosters and key players to watch
The tournament begins Tuesday in Buffalo.
If you needed a warmup to get into international hockey before the 2018 Winter Olympics, the best young players in the world will have you covered at the 2018 World Junior Championship tournament. The United States will be looking to defend its title on home ice in Buffalo after a thrilling victory in Montreal a year ago.
The World Juniors is an annual under-20 tournament featuring junior national teams full of top prospects. It’s a great chance to watch some extremely gifted players in an intense competition as they represent their countries. Even if it’s not quite star-studded like an NHL-backed Olympic tournament would be, the talent level will be high.
And for NHL fans, the tournament is always a stellar opportunity to keep up with the future of the game. Many of the players in Buffalo will go on to become NHL stars. If you want to get a leg up on your friends when discussing the 2018 draft, then following the World Juniors is a good place to start.
With that in mind, here’s a quick look at every team competing in the 2018 World Juniors, along with a key player to watch on each roster. NHL rights are included in parenthesis.
United States
Roster
Forwards: Ryan Poehling (MTL), Brady Tkachuk, Josh Norris (SJS), Casey Mittelstadt (BUF), Joey Anderson (NJD), Kailer Yamamoto (EDM), Patrick Harper (NSH), Logan Brown (OTT), Kieffer Bellows (NYI), Riley Tufte (DAL), Trent Frederic (BOS), Max Jones (ANA)
Defensemen: Ryan Lindgren (BOS), Quinn Hughes, Adam Fox (CGY), Dylan Samberg (WPG), Scott Perunovich, Andrew Peeke (CBJ), Mikey Anderson (LAK)
Goaltenders: Jake Oettinger (DAL), Joseph Woll (TOR), Jeremy Swayman (BOS)
Key player to watch: Quinn Hughes
There are a lot of must-see talents on Team USA, including Mittelstadt, Norris, and Yamamoto, but Hughes stands out because you’ve probably never seen him before. The University of Michigan star is a top prospect for the 2018 NHL Draft, and projects as a possible top-five pick. He’s undersized but makes up for it with amazing skating and puck handling. This will be the first chance for a lot of fans to see him up close, which should be exciting.
Canada
Roster
Forwards: Dillon Dube (CGY), Jonah Gadjovich (VAN), Boris Katchouk (TBL), Maxime Comtois (ANA), Taylor Raddysh (TBL), Tyler Steenbergen (ARI), Drake Batherson (OTT), Michael McLeod (NJD), Brett Howden (TBL), Sam Steel (ANA), Alex Formenton (OTT), Jordan Kyrou (STL), Robert Thomas (STL)
Defensemen: Jake Bean (CAR), Conor Timmins (COL), Cal Foote (TBL), Cale Makar (COL), Dante Fabbro (NSH), Kale Clague (LAK), Victor Mete (MTL)
Goaltenders: Carter Hart (PHI), Colton Point (DAL)
Key player to watch: Robert Thomas
Team Canada lacks the usual star power you’d expect from the world’s biggest hockey powerhouse, but it’s still a solid roster full of top prospects. Thomas, the No. 20 overall pick in the 2017 draft, stands out given his scorching start in the OHL. The versatile center has 46 points in 27 games for the London Knights after averaging a point per game last season.
Sweden
Roster
Forwards: Marcus Davidsson (BUF), Tim Soderlund (CHI), Glenn Gustafsson, Elias Pettersson (VAN), Linus Lindstrom (CGY), Fredrik Karlstrom (DAL), Alexander Nylander (BUF), Isac Lundestrom, Jesper Boqvist (NJD), Axel Jonsson Fjallby (WAS), Lias Andersson (NYR), Fabian Zetterlund (NJD), Oskar Steen (BOS)
Defensemen: Rasmus Dahlin, Erik Brannstrom (VGK), Timothy Liljegren (TOR), Linus Hogberg (PHI), Gustav Lindstrom (DET), Jesper Sellgren, Jacob Moverare (LAK)
Goaltenders: Filip Gustavsson (PIT), Filip Larsson (DET), Olle Eriksson Ek (ANA)
Key player to watch: Rasmus Dahlin
Get ready to hear his name over and over. Rasmus Dahlin. It’s a great name for a prospect so talented he’s like the Connor McDavid of defensemen. Dahlin already has a treasure trove of ridiculous highlights on YouTube and he doesn’t turn 18 until April. The consensus projected No. 1 overall pick for the 2018 NHL Draft is a special prospect, and he’ll be a leader for Sweden despite being one of the youngest players on the team. Expect this to be a fun precursor to his leading role in Pyeongchang before he makes his NHL debut next fall.
Russia
Roster
Forwards: Vitali Abramov (CBJ), Andrei Altybarmakan (CHI), Georgi Ivanov, Artur Kayumov (CHI), Klim Kostin (STL), Mikhail Maltsev (NJD), Artyom Manukyan, Alexei Polodyan, German Rubtsov (PHI), Marsel Sholokhov, Dmitri Sokolov (MIN), Andrei Svechnikov
Defensemen: Nikolai Knyzhov, Nikita Makeyev, Artyom Minulin, Dmitri Samorukov (EDM), Alexander Shepelev, Vladislav Syomin, Anatoli Yelizarov, Yegor Zaitev (NJD)
Goaltenders: Vladislav Sukhachyov, Mikhail Berdin (WPG), Alexei Melnichuk
Key player to watch: Andrei Svechnikov
There’s little doubt who will be the star player for Russia in Buffalo. Svechnikov is widely expected to be the first forward selected in the 2018 NHL Draft. The 18-year-old has 14 goals in 16 games with the OHL’s Barrie Colts this season, and could be a prime contender to lead the tournament in scoring if Russia can make a deep run. Between Dahlin, Svechnikov, and Hughes, you’ll potentially be able to see the top three draft picks for next year.
Finland
Roster
Forwards: Juha Jaaska, Janne Kuokkanen (CAR), Otto Koivula (NYI), Kristian Vesalainen (WPG), Joona Koppanen (BOS), Eetu Tuulola (CGY), Eeli Tolvanen (NSH), Markus Nurmi (OTT), Aapeli Rasanen (EDM), Joni Ikonen (MTL), Aleksi Heponiemi (FLA), Jere Innala, Rasmus Kupari
Defensemen: Miro Heiskanen (DAL), Robin Salo (NYI), Eemeli Rasanen (TOR), Juuso Valimaki (CGY), Olli Juolevi (VAN), Urho Vaakanainen (BOS), Henri Jokiharju (CHI), Kasper Kotkansalo (DET)
Goaltenders: Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen (BUF), Lassi Lehtinen, Niilo Halonen
Key player to watch: Miro Heiskanen
The Heiskanen hype train rolls into Buffalo this week. The Stars’ 2017 first-round pick is already playing a starring role in Finland’s top league at age 18 and will likely be the country’s top defenseman for the 2018 Winter Olympics in February. Heiskanen has elite-level NHL upside, and this will be his first chance to put it all on display for a North American audience.
Czech Republic
Roster
Forwards: Filip Chytil (NYR), Filip Helt (STL), Martin Kaut, Krystof Hrabik, Petr Kodytek, Daniel Kurovsky, Jakub Lauko, Albert Michnac, Martin Necas (CAR), Radovan Pavlik, Kristian Reichel, Ostap Safin (EDM), Marek Zachar, Filip Zadina
Defensemen: Vojtech Budik (BUF), Jakub Galvas (CHI), Libor Hajek (TBL), Filip Kral, Radim Salda, Ondrej Vala (DAL)
Goaltenders: Milan Kloucek, Josef Korenar (SJS), Jakub Skarek
Key player to watch: Filip Zadina
The Czech Republic boasts a pair of 2017 first-round picks in Chytil and Necas, but its best player may be Zadina, the 2018 draft-eligible prospect who projects as a potential top-five pick. He’s been adjusting to the North American game this season with 46 points in 32 games in the QMJHL, and NHL.com gives him a (likely unreasonable) comparison to Patrick Kane. This could be a breakout opportunity for the 18-year-old.
Denmark
Roster
Forwards: Jacob Schmidt-Svejstrup, Valdemar Ahlberg, Christian Mathiasen-Wejse, Jonas Rondbjerg (VGK), Lucas Andersen, Nikolaj Krag (STL), Joachim Blichfeld (SJS), Daniel Nielsen, Andreas Grundtvig, David Madsen, Magnus Molge, Phillip Schultz, Christoffer Gath
Defensemen: Oliver Larsen, Malte Setkov (DET), Christian Larsen, Jakob Jessen, Jeppe Mogensen, Rasmus Heine, Lasse Mortensen
Goaltenders: Emil Gransoe, Mads Soegaard, Kasper Krog
Key player to watch: Jonas Rondbjerg
One of just two Golden Knights prospects in the tournament, Rondbjerg will also likely be Denmark’s best player. The 2017 third-round pick is already playing a steady role with the Vaxjo Lakers in the SHL, Sweden’s top league, as an 18-year-old. He has seven points in 25 games this season.
Slovakia
Roster
Forwards: Erik Smolka, Samuel Bucek, Viliam Cacho, Filip Krivosik, Milos Kelemen, Adam Liska, Marian Studenic (NJD), Peter Kundrik, Adam Ruzicka (CGY), Samuel Solensky, Alex Tamasi, Milos Roman
Defensemen: Tomas Hedera, Martin Bodak, Martin Fehervary, Marek Korencik, David Matejovic, Michal Ivan, Vojtech Zelenak, Samuel Fereta
Goaltenders: David Hrenak, Jakub Kostelny, Roman Durny
Key player to watch: Adam Ruzicka
Part of the dying breed of big-bodied power forwards, Ruzicka might’ve gone higher than No. 109 overall in the 2017 draft if he had been playing this well a year ago. The 6’4, 203-pound winger has a team-leading 20 goals and 142 shots on goal in 34 games for the OHL’s Sarnia Sting. He’ll be leaned on heavily on the power play for a team looking to improve upon last year’s eighth-place finish.
Belarus
Roster
Forwards: Viktor Bovbel, Vladislav Ryadchenko, Alexander Lukashevich, Igor Martynov, Arseni Astashevich, Sergei Pishuk, Yegor Sharangovich, Ivan Drozdov, Vladislav Mikhalchuk, Maxim Sushko (PHI), Artyom Anisimov, Ilya Litvinov, Dmitri Grinkevich
Defensemen: Andrei Gostev, Vladislav Sokolovski, Dmitri Deryabin, Vladislav Martynyuk, Vladislav Yeryomenko, Dmitri Burovtsev, Vladislav Gabrus
Goaltenders: Dmitri Rodik, Andrei Grishenko, Vikita Tolopilo
Key player to watch: Maxim Sushko
Belarus only has one player whose rights are held by an NHL team, so it’s not difficult to pick which player to focus on. Sushko, the Flyers’ 2017 fourth-round pick, is a talented winger with 16 goals in 28 games for the OHL’s Owen Sound Attack this season. He’s not going to get much help in Buffalo, but he’s worth keeping an eye on.
Switzerland
Roster
Forwards: Nicolas Muller, Guillaume Maillard, Marco Miranda, Justin Sigrist, Ken Jager, Valentin Nussbaumer, Axel Simic, Sven Leuenberger, Nando Eggenberger, Philipp Kurashev, Andre Heim, Marco Cavalleri, Dario Rohrbach
Defensemen: Simon le Coultre, Davyd Barandun, Tobias Geisser, Nico Gross, Elia Riva, Tim Berni, Dominik Egli
Goaltenders: Matteo Ritz, Akira Schmid, Philip Wuthrich
Key player to watch: Tobias Geisser
Switzerland is a candidate for relegation by the end of this tournament, and its lack of potential NHL talent is a bit reason why. Nico Hischier is no longer around to carry this group, which finished seventh a year ago. The one guy who stands out is Geisser, a 2017 fourth-round pick by the Capitals who brings a ton of size (6’4, 201 pounds) and a big shot to the table.
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arthisour-blog · 8 years ago
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The museum is located in the legendary writer’s village Peredelkino 5 km. from Moscow. This is a Museum for children and adults. Museum of the great paintings by contemporary Russian artists – Katya Medvedeva, Lucy VORONOVA, Victor Nikolayev, Arsen Levonee, Sergei Ladoshin, Vadim Romanov. The Museum has a laboratory of artistic and social project, where every visitor will be able to create their own exposition, and develop a proactive social project.
Peredelkino (Russian: Переде́лкино; IPA: [pʲɪrʲɪˈdʲelkʲɪnə]) is a dacha complex situated just to the southwest of Moscow, Russia.
The settlement originated as the estate of Peredeltsy, owned by the Leontievs (maternal relatives of Peter the Great), then by Princes Dolgorukov and by the Samarins. After a railway passed through the village in the 19th century, it was renamed Peredelkino. In 1934, Maxim Gorky suggested handing over the area to the Union of Soviet Writers. Within several years, about fifty wooden cottages were constructed in Peredelkino by writers to German designs.
Among the littérateurs who settled in Peredelkino were Boris Pasternak, Korney Chukovsky, Arseny Tarkovsky (all three buried at the local cemetery), Ilya Ehrenburg, Veniamin Kaverin, Leonid Leonov, Ilya Ilf, Vsevolod Ivanov, Nikolay Zabolotsky, Boris Pilnyak, Lilya Brik, Konstantin Simonov, Alexander Fadeyev, and Mikhail Bakhtin. Turkish poet Nâzım Hikmet spent the early years of his self-imposed exile in the USSR at Peredelkino. More recently, Yevgeny Yevtushenko, Andrei Voznesensky, Bella Akhmadulina, Robert Rozhdestvensky, and Zurab Tsereteli moved into the area as well.
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The arrest of author and playwright Isaak Babel, one of the most notorious events of Joseph Stalin’s Great Purge, took place in Peredelkino on May 15, 1939.[1] Babel was then taken by automobile to the Lubyanka Prison, tortured, and shot by the NKVD.
Peredelkino is presumably the source for the name of Mikhail Bulgakov’s Perelygino. But, Bulgakov places his Perelygino on the Klyazma, Bolshevo, which is where another writers’ colony was. The village is also featured in John le Carré’s spy novel The Russia House.
In 1988, the cottages of Chukovsky and Pasternak were proclaimed memorial houses, while the area of Peredelkino was designated a “historical and cultural reservation”. A decade later, the dacha of Bulat Okudzhava was also opened to the public as a museum. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, Peredelkino was taken over by the Russian new rich. Many new apartment buildings were constructed in Novo-Peredelkino district nearby.
As of 2005, the most notable resident of Peredelkino was Alexy II, Patriarch of Moscow and all Russia. The summer residence of Lukino (originally built in the Russian Revival-style for Baron de Bodé) adjoins the 19th-century church of the Transfiguration of the Saviour. Alexy II died there on December 5, 2008.
The territory of the complex is divided between three administrative units: its eastern portion is located in jurisdiction of Western Administrative Okrug of Moscow, its northwestern portion—in jurisdiction of Odintsovsky District of Moscow Oblast, and its southwestern portion—in jurisdiction of Leninsky District of Moscow Oblast.
Museum of Fine Arts in Peredelkino Moscow, DSK Michurinetch, Russia was originally published on HiSoUR Art Collection
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tmaaov · 1 year ago
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THE INSTITUTE ASSISTANTS (+ boris as a comment ig..)
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Our FAVORITE boys!!!!
RIKER (yellow eyes) belongs to @its-ignis BRADLEY (ourple eyes) belongs to @killserj KONSTANTIN (white outline) + Boris V Ivanov (comment) belongs to @beautifulrosebrunette PIERRE(politely shocked expression) belongs to @marblehornetfan28 AND the art is made by @killserj
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tmaaov · 1 year ago
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"WHAT'S THE TIME MR WOLF?"
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ART BY @killserj
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tmaaov · 11 months ago
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HI TMAAOV TUMBLR NATION i won a raffle recently . boris was the guy . look .
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ARTIST: https://twitter.com/c4horse_
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tmaaov · 2 years ago
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ART BY @killserj !!
Join us ! https://discord.gg/dpDV6MFemr
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tmaaov · 1 year ago
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Who is Riker?
I am literally so glad you asked! Since Riker is NOT my character , I will be giving a little rundown and if you're curious you either A. Join the server B. See if the creator posts .. something? to explain. C. Take what I give you, and call it a day!
Who is Riker Azzam?
Riker Azzam is a character created by @its-ignis ! Riker is one of the four Institute Assistants, and he's the one who got promoted most recently. Riker is a professional at getting on the Institute's Head's nerves, Boris V Ivanov. Riker is genderqueer and uses he/she Riker is one of the few avatars of The Extinction , but if I'm being honest with you from his powers vs weaknesses I would simply pass away.
Riker is with the Head Archivist, Ichabod Baudelaire and also in a queerplatonic relationship with one of the (former? going to happen soon) Church members, Virgilius Peralta.
Riker was the only person that managed to approach former head Archivist, Alojz Novak without outright dying. He did get shot 3 times though. Riker is also made out of metal, wires, and coding. Furthermore she was also the winner of the 2023 Sexyman TMAAOV contest which crashed discord for the members 3 separate times!
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beautifulrosebrunette · 8 months ago
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I think about him sometimes
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beautifulrosebrunette · 2 years ago
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No babe, I do love you! It’s just the fact that you kill your Archivists every 13 years just kinda puts me off, you know? Art by @killserj go support them !!
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tmaaov · 1 year ago
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Wait so is there like an Elias equivalent here?
Yup! That would be my little guy, Boris V. Ivanov
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