The Third Moscow Biennale Red October 2009
Russian Povera
Curator: Marat Guelman
Venue: Red October
New Old Cold War
Curators: Yulia Aksenova, Karolina Nowak
Venue: Red October
Luc Tuymans, Belgium
Project: Against the Day
Venue: BAIBAKOV art projects, Red October
Olga Chernysheva, Russia
Project: Present - Past
Venue: to be specified
Revolution per Minute
Curator: Anna Bitkina
Venue: Red October
Red - Red
Curators: Elena Tsvetaeva, Evgeny Umansky, Yulia Bardun
Venue: Red October
No Comment Art Moscow
3-го, 4-го и 5-го февраля 2012 года, в Москве, на территории бывшей шоколадной фабрики Красный Октябрь, в фотостудии ISO, состоялась концептуальная выставка современного искусства No Comment Art. Moscow.
Организатором выставки выступила pop-up art галерея «Loft in the Red Zone» (Лофт в Красной Зоне), которая специализируется на передвижных экспозициях современного социального искусства.
Видео:
Anna Gogichaishvili and Sergei Gelun
February 3rd, 4th and the 5th, 2012, а conceptual art exhibition No Comment Art. Moscow was held in ISO photography studio, on the territory of former chocolate factory Red October in Moscow, Russia.
The show was organized by a pop-up art gallery «Loft in the Red Zone», which is focusing on traveling exhibitions of contemporary art with social commentary.
Special Thanks for making this video possible to Anna Gogichaishvili and Sergei Gelun.
RED OCTOBER WUNDER BAR MOSCOW HUNT FOR 0.02 AUGUST RAIN
Sagami Xtreme
Теперь и на facebook
JANNIS KOUNELLIS at Red October
JANNIS KOUNELLIS at Red October / Moscow Special Guests program of the 4th Moscow Biennale of Contemporary Arts - October 26/2011
Таня Пеникер
Таня Пеникер родилась в 1994 году в Москве. В 17 лет она стала самой молодой участницей проекта «Старт» в ЦСИ «Винзаводе». Окончила МГИМО и Институт проблем современного искусства. В 2014 году стала участницей параллельной программы европейской биеннале современного искусства Manifesta 10 в Санкт-Петербурге.
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Также выставлялась на площадках Artplay на Яузе, Red October Gallery, Центрального дома художника в Москве и других. С 2013 года ее работы регулярно участвуют в аукционе современного искусства Vladey.
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Персонажи графики Пёникер образуют сюрреалистические узоры, закручиваются вихрем в разнообразные формы. Пока другие молодые художники активно используют новые медиа, Пёникер выбирает быть современной на бумаге.
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Для обложки BoscoMagazine Зима-2018/2019 Таня создала многослойный графический рисунок, где переплетаются узнаваемые детали с фантазийными и символическими персонажами. На обложке изображена праздничная сцена встречи Нового года, года Свиньи, поэтому ее героями стали забавные хрюшки.
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Tanya Pioniker was born in 1994 in Moscow. At the age of 17 Pioniker became of the youngest participants of the special START project at the Winzavod Moscow Contemporary Art Center. Graduate of the Institute of Contemporary Art and the Moscow State Institute of International Relations.
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In 2014 she took part in the parallel program of the European Biennale of Contemporary Art – Manifesta 10 in St. Petersburg. Her works were displayed at ARTPLAY on Yauza, Red October Gallery, the Central House of Artists in Moscow, and others. Since 2013 Pioniker has been a regular participant of contemporary art auctions at VLADEY.
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The characters of Tanya Pioniker’s graphics create surrealistic ornaments, whirled into different shapes.
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The winter cover of the BoscoMagazine 2018/2019 depicts a New Year celebration. 2019 is the Year of the Pig, and the image of cute piggies amid traditional New Year decorations is reflective of that.
Russia outraged by giant Louis Vuitton suitcase shaped pavillion erected in Red Square
A giant Louis Vuitton suitcase installed in Moscow's Red Square to celebrate the brand's 150th anniversary is to be dismantled after being criticised by politicians and the public alike.
The GUM department store on Red Square, which is responsible for the 30-feet (nine metres) high and 100-feet (30-metre) long construction, promised in a statement released on Wednesday that the suitcase would be removed from the square.
Local resident Ludmila Volkova called the exhibition, which is a stone's throw away from the tomb of Soviet leader Vladimir Lenin, improper.
It is very out of place, just because it is the Red Square. For us, for our generation, it is a sacred place, Volkova said.
However not everyone agreed with her.
Another local resident said the suitcase was at the right place as it was used to collect money for children with disabilities.
State news agencies reported that the Kremlin had demanded the removal of the display.
The construction is part of an exhibition called The Soul of Travel, marking Vuitton's 150th birthday and was to open on December 2.
Louis Vuitton said the construction was a copy of a model owned by a Russian noble, Prince Vladimir Orlov.
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Comrades won! Louis Vuitton suitcase in Red Square dismantled
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Prime Time Russia is the first TV show for an English-speaking audience in Russia. Weekdays from 8-9pm: the latest news, politics, business, sport and cultural events discussed live. A Russian survival guide, venue reviews -- even business start-up advice.
Moscow. Saint Basils Cathedral (HD) 2011 summer
Russia.
Moscow.
19 august 2011.
The Cathedral of the Protection of Most Holy Theotokos on the Moat (Russian: Собор Покрова пресвятой Богородицы, что на Рву), popularly known as Saint Basil's Cathedral (Russian: Собор Василия Блаженного), is a Russian Orthodox church erected on the Red Square in Moscow in 1555--61. Built on the order of Ivan the Terrible to commemorate the capture of Kazan and Astrakhan, it marks the geometric center of the city and the hub of its growth since the 14th century.
2011© MoscowJob.Net
First anniversary of the Red October, Petrograd 1918 ☭ Bolshevik Revolution-3
First anniversary celebration in Petrograd, 1918, an informal affair featuring demonstrations, columns of marchers on the streets and squares of the city, and a military parade on Uritsky Square (former Palace Square). Marchers gather the famous Alexander Column, which avant-garde artist Natan Al'tman had converted into a mobile fabric torch.
????????♂️ Walking Streets: Moscow, Russia, from Gorky Central Park to Muzeon Park of Arts
???? From Gorky Central Park to Muzeon Park of Arts along the embankment of the Moscow river
00:15 ➡️ Pushkinskaya embankment
01:11 ➡️ Moscow river embankment
01:48 ➡️ Golitsynskiy pond
03:00 ➡️ Bridge over the pond
03:57 ➡️ Boat rental station
04:31 ➡️ Pizzamento
06:01 ➡️ Embankment of the pond
06:58 ➡️ Playground
07:49 ➡️ Restaurant Ostrovok
09:31 ➡️ Panoramic view of the Ministry of Defense
09:43 ➡️ Walking embankment along the Moscow River
11:42 ➡️ Panoramic view of the Krymsky Bridge
???? Built in 1938, this steel bridge spanning the Moskva River is the only suspension bridge in Moscow.
13:31 ➡️ Foodcourt
14:23 ➡️ Pleasure boat mooring
19:13 ➡️ Krymsky Bridge
20:52 ➡️ Muzeon Park of Arts
22:00 ➡️ Krymskaya embankment
23:35 ➡️ Panoramic view of the Monument to Peter I
???? Commemorative statue honoring Tsar Peter the Great & the 300th anniversary of the Russian Navy.
24:21 ➡️ Fountain opposite the Tretyakov Gallery
25:17 ➡️ Panoramic view of Red October, the city center and the Cathedral of Christ the Savior
27:36 ➡️ Monument to Peter the Great
31:25 ➡️ Yakimanskaya embankment
34:21 ➡️ Embankment Construction
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A Chinese artist's take on the Russian Revolution
(14 Sep 2017) LEADIN
Contemporary Chinese artist Cai Guo-Qiang, who designed the fireworks for the Beijing Olympics, opens his first solo exhibition in Russia this week.
Featuring giant installations, Cai Guo-Qiang: October marks the 100-year anniversary of the Russian Revolution.
STORYLINE
A huge pile of birch trees, donated baby cribs and pushchairs almost block the main entrance of Moscow's Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts.
This is 'Autumn', an art installation by contemporary Chinese artist Cai Guo-Qiang, also known for having designed the fireworks for Beijing Olympics.
The 16-metre high installation will stand there during the month-long exhibition, so visitors and passers-by can witness the birches turn yellow and lose their leaves.
It was Cai's vision that when the leaves fall, they accumulate in the cradles and strollers to symbolize the necessary death that feeds the next generation.
The cradles and baby paraphernalia were donated by Moscow residents.
Cai's first solo exhibition in Russia features giant installations both indoors and outdoors that touch upon themes of trauma, triumph, and utopia.
The temporary exhibition Cai Guo-Qiang: October marks the 100-year anniversary of the Russian Revolution.
Having grown up in Maoist China and experienced the hardship of the Cultural Revolution, Cai's take on the Russian revolution is unique.
His usual medium of gunpowder takes on a deeper meaning when coupled with subjects of social upheaval and civil war.
Preparations for this exhibition have been going on for over two years, during which Cai's team had to deal with the logistics of such installations, such as permissions to import and detonate gunpowder.
The museum director, Marina Loshak, says Cai had hoped to have a gunpowder installation on the Red Square, but that was denied.
In trying to make the gunpowder installation to coincide with the opening of the exhibition, Cai and I thought that the best place for that would be the Red Square. Everything was thought out, but we weren't allowed to do it there; I hope that we will be able to in the future. Nevertheless, since we are people who build the future from what is inside us, we still realised it, but inside the museum.
The work in question is Sound, a 20-meter piece of cloth hanging above the main staircase of the museum, which bare famous lines from the left-wing anthem The Internationale: There Are No Supreme Saviours. Not God, Not Caesar And No Hero.
A line remembered by all those who were raised in the Soviet Union.
A centerpiece of the exhibition is the Earth installation, a huge field of wheat covering up almost the entirety of a main hall.
The field is reflected in a huge mirror hanging from the ceiling, so Every individual visitor is considered as part of the works to be shown in the sky, says Cai.
Nearly two million individual stalks of wheat were painstakingly put in by an army of volunteers.
On either side of Earth hang the largest canvases in the collection, Garden and River.
From a distance they look like abstract paintings, one very colourful, the other one in grey shades.
But at a closer look, one can see a universe of details.
Soviet era propaganda posters and slogans, photographs of soldiers and families, details from the Russian Civil War and World War II, all hidden between blots of violent strokes.
Among the chaos of images and non-images in the winding 'River piece, a picture of Cai himself is hidden at the far right end.
He speaks enthusiastically of the selfie he took in the State Tretyakov Gallery next to an Ivan Kramskoi painting which he used to reproduce regularly as a young artist.
The colour scope of Garden makes the spots of detonation look like the centres of flowers.
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'Japanese Warhol' Takashi Murakami's latest exhibition in Moscow
Another exhibition that has just gone on display is making waves for the first time in Russia. Takashi Murakami is recognised for his pop art with a hint of Japanese tradition. Now, Russians can visit the first exhibition by the 'Japanese Warhol'.
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Red Army Museum Moscow
Red Army Museum Moscow
⁴ᴷ⁵⁰ Walking Moscow: Moscow Center - Bol'shaya Yakimanka, Tret'yakovskaya Mt. to Novokuznetskaya Mt.
Google Maps Route:
We begin our walk from Ulitsa Bol'shaya Yakimanka (Street) where we see the President-Hotel.
After that we walk throught the Yakimanskiy Proyezd (Passage), after that through Yakimanskiy Skver (Square) and see the Monument to G. M. Dimitrov.
Then we walk through the Bol'shoy Tolmachevskiy Pereulok (Alleyway) and turn left to the Lavrushinsky Ln (Alleyway) and walk toward The State Tretyakov Gallery.
After that we continue our walk through the Lavrushinsky Ln (Alleyway) to the Luzhkov Most (Bridge) and see A Bench of Reconciliation & Derev'ya Lyubvi (Trees of Love).
We walk to the Repin Monument and after that turn right to the Monument, that named Children Are Victims of Adult Vices. The sculptural composition as an allegory of the fight against evil and social vices was established on Bolotnaya Square in Moscow on the territory of the 800th anniversary of Moscow. It was installed in 2001. The author is an artist and sculptor Mikhail Shemyakin.
We continue our walk through the Bolotnaya Naberezhnaya (Promenade) through the Malyy Moskvoretskiy Most (Bridge), walk till to the Chugunnyy Most (Bridge).
After that we walk through the Ulitsa Pyatnitskaya (Street) and see beautiful Church of the Beheading of John the Baptist Under Bor.
After that we turn to Chernigovskiy Pereulok (Alleyway) and see there bulding Mezhdunarodnyy Fond Slavyanskoy Pis'mennosti I Kul'tury (International Foundation for Slavic Writing and Culture).
After that we walk to the Ulitsa Bol'shaya Ordynka (Street) where we see many beautiful buildings and Church of the Consolation of All Sorrows.
We turn left to the Tret'yakovskaya Metro Station, to the Klimentovskiy Pereulok (Alleyway) and see Art Gallery Krokin. After that we walk near Khram Svyashchennomuchenika Klimenta Papy Rimskogo V Zamoskvorech'ye (Cathedral of the Holy Martyr Clement of the Pope in Zamoskvorechye). We across the Ulitsa Pyatnitskaya (Street), turn left to the Sadovnicheskiy Proyezd (Passage), see the fountain Adam & Eve and end our walk near the Novokuznetskaya Metro Station.
Enjoy this walk with us!
Мы начинаем нашу прогулку с Улицы Большая Якиманка, где мы видим Президент-Отель.
После этого мы проходим по Якиманскому Проезду, затем по Якиманскому Скверу и видим памятник Г. М. Димитрову.
Затем мы проходим по Большому Толмачевскому Переулку и поворачиваем налево к Лаврушинскому Переулку и идем к Государственной Третьяковской Галерее.
После этого мы продолжаем нашу прогулку по Лаврушинскому Переулку к Лужкову мосту и видим «Скамью Примирения» и «Деревья Любви».
Мы идем к Памятнику Репину и после этого поворачиваем направо к памятнику, который называется «Дети - Жертвы Пороков Взрослых». Скульптурная композиция как аллегория борьбы со злом и социальными пороками была создана на Болотной площади в Москве на территории 800-летия Москвы. Была установлена в 2001 году. Автор - художник и скульптор Михаил Шемякин.
Мы продолжаем прогулку по Болотной Набережной, по Малому Москворецкому Мосту, до Чугунного Моста.
После этого мы прогуляемся по Улице Пятницкой и видим Храм Усекновения Главы Иоанна Предтечи Под Бором.
После этого мы поворачиваем к Черниговскому Переулку и видим там здание Международный фонд Славянской письменности и культуры.
После этого мы идем к Улице Большая Ордынка, где мы видим много красивых зданий и Церковь иконы Божией Матери Всех скорбящих Радость.
Поворачиваем налево к Станции Метро Третьяковская, Климентовскому переулку и видим Художественную Галерею Крокина. После этого мы прогуляемся возле храма Священногоученика Климента Папы Римского в Замоскворечье. Мы пересекаем Пятницкую Улицу, поворачиваем налево к Садовническому Проезду, подходим к фонтану Адам и Ева и заканчиваем прогулку возле Станции Метро Новокузнецкая.
Наслаждайтесь этой прогулкой с нами!
Filmed October 17, 2019
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The Russian Revolution 1917
Everything you need to know about the Russian Revolution in a 13 min video. Produced in partnership with Bridgeman Images
We explain all the major events of Russia's TWO revolutions of 1917– the February Revolution that ended Tsarist rule in Russia, and the October Revolution, that brought the Bolsheviks to power. We explain the causes of Tsar Nicholas II's growing unpopularity - the role of the mysterious Siberian mystic Rasputin, Russia's disastrous involvement in World War One, and the events on the streets of Petrograd that led to the Tsar's abdication. That summer Russia lurched from crisis to crisis, with a Provisional Government that faced riots (the July Days), military revolt (the Kornilov Affair), economic chaos, and constantly dwindling support. Socialist Prime Minister Alexander Kerensky, once hailed as Russia's great hope, was unable to restore order, or, in October, prevent the Bolsheviks from launching a coup, organised by Leon Trotsky and led by Vladimir Lenin, that overthrow the Provisional Government and brought the Bolsheviks to power. A brutal civil war followed, leading to the death of more than 10 million Russians – amongst them Tsar Nicholas II and his family, executed by Bolsheviks at Yekaterinburg in July 1918. From the wreckage emerged the Soviet Union, formed in 1922, and destined to be one of the 20th century's two superpowers.
Please help me make more history videos by supporting me at Patreon:
#EpicHistoryTV #HistoryofRussia #RussianRevolution
Recommended books on the Russian Revolution (as an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases):
S. A. Smith, The Russian Revolution: A Very Short Introduction
Orlando Figes, A People's Tragedy: The Russian Revolution
Robert Service, The Last of the Tsars: Nicholas II and the Russian Revolution
Neil Faulkner, A People's History of the Russian Revolution
Flea markets are popular in Moscow
(6 May 2009) SHOTLIST
March 27, 2009 - Moscow, Russia
1. Close up of lamps, bottles and candlesticks
2. Mid of women, pan to stand with Soviet decorative porcelain
3. Close up of iron, Russia, 1920s, 4000 rubles ($120)
4. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Marina Smirnova, festival organiser:
The Flea Market art project has not been affected by the financial crisis. Maybe because people come here not only for business - of course if there were no business success there were no exhibitors - but rather for the atmosphere here. Music of the 40s and 50s, cup of tea offered to every guest, friendly atmosphere and the desire of all exhibitors to tell people the story of the goods they sell - this is essential.
5. Close up of money-box, United States, 1950s, 5000 rubles ($150)
6. Mid of man showing the money-box
7. Close up of photo showing military academy graduates, Russia, 1906, 3100 rubles ($95)
AP archive - no restrictions
8. Various of Russian tsar Nicholas II reviewing troops (1900s)
March 27, 2009 - Moscow, Russia
9. Mid of people looking at items on sale
10. Close up of bell, spoon and large keys, Russia, appr. 19th century
11. Mid of cutlery, tilt up to women picking out spoons and forks 12. Wide of stand selling postcards, posters and magazines
13. Close up of Soviet postcards, 1930s-1950s, 100-500 rubles ($4-15)
14. Close up of poster showing Soviet leader Joseph Stalin
AP archive - no restrictions
1930s
15. Various of Stalin at May Day parade
March 27, 2009 - Moscow, Russia
16. Mid of woman selling antiquities from Belgium
17. Close up pan of various items on sale
18. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Olga, collector:
This is a very old plate, it's made of papier-mache. (zoom in plate), Belgium, 15000 rubles ($450). These fleur-de-lis mean that it was made before Napoleon. (zoom out). So it's a very old piece, hand-made and painted by hand and it has been preserved in excellent condition. Such things are very rare.
19. Mid of people talking, zoom in teddy-bear
April 29, 2009 - Moscow, Russia
20. Set up of art expert Natalia Tamruchi in her gallery
21. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Natalia Tamruchi, art expert:
the flea market is a rummage sale, where everything should be sold for next to nothing. It's a rule, it's the law of the flea market. It's not an antique shop, there is a difference between flea markets and antique shops. But here (at the Flea Market Festival) the prices are absolutely antique.
April 26, 2009 - Moscow, Russia
22. Wide pan of flea market at railway station
23. Mid of women shuffling in old clothes
24. Close up of sculptures of dogs
25. Mid of man selling carpet, (in Russian) 200 rubles! Take it! It's chic!
26. Cutaway deer on the carpet
27. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Spartak, carpet seller:
All Muscovites like it. They come here to sell things. These markets shouldn't be closed, they (authorities) should rather open such markets in every city district and we would be happy.
28. Wide of flea market
29. Close up of phones and toys
30. Mid of men looking at things on sale
31. Close up Soviet shoulder straps, 1980s, 70 rubles ($2)
32. Close up of tea pot
LEAD IN :
Flea markets are a part of every self-respecting city.
Berlin, London and Paris have numerous outdoor bazaars that draw thousands of visitors every weekend.
Almost all Moscow's flea markets disappeared in Soviet times when the state heightened repression of private trade and speculation.
Those who broke the law could face long prison terms.
But now flea markets are becoming popular once again.
STORYLINE:
Moscow's Flea Market festival is a treasure trove of artifacts.
Held three times each year, buyers can find everything from china ornaments to cast iron household items.
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CHILDREN from DEADLY FLOOD-HIT Krymsk COME TO MOSCOW on charity trip
CHILDREN from DEADLY FLOOD-HIT Krymsk COME TO MOSCOW on charity trip
Moscow, Russia
October 2012
-Video from RIA Novosti
(Видео с Российское агентство международных новостей)
Almost three months have passed since devastating floods swept the small town of Krymsk in south Russia, killing 170 residents.
While repair work continues in Krymsk, children from the town have been brought to Moscow to take in the sights and take their minds off the hardships back at home.
The trip was made possible through a charity art auction organized by financier and artist Vladimir Ovcharenko. He told how the idea came to him.
We are so far, but you feel its your country, it is the Russian people, so you feel that it is very close to your life. You always think, OK, so what can I do personally to help some people? First you can just send them money or maybe you can do something more.
Putting the word out to his friends, he raised money for his big plan.
I called to a couple of them and asked them: 'Do you like the idea of doing a charity auction to sell some works to help the children of Krymsk?' And I got the same second good reaction so I said hey, let's go.
In just a few days, the auction was set, and soon around $220,000 was raised. Hotels were booked, train tickets bought, and plans set.
About 300 children arrived in Moscow and spent nearly a week blitzing the capital in a cultural extravaganza of art, history and fun.
Psychologists gave Ocvhanernko and his staff helpful information on how a child's mind recovers from such experiences.
Ovcharenko explained: They don't recommend that we remind them about that. So we don't talk about bad things, we talk about good things, about Moscow, about cultural centers, about museums, about good weather, good food, you know? So they have to get good emotions. They need it.
The children visited a modern art exhibition, took a lesson in creative handicrafts, enjoyed Moscow's newly restored planetarium, and took a master class in hip-hop dancing.
They did their best to take advantage of the trip and forget the dramatic moments they had to live through.
Ruslan was lucky to survive the flood.
My parents work night shifts, so I was alone. I had to climb to the roof, and had to wait there and then climbed over into the house of our neighbors.
Natalia, one of staff accompanying the children to Moscow, told how happy and grateful children are.
These are children who live in adopted families and those who suffered from the flood. When we arrived in Moscow they were all very excited, you should have seen their reaction to the hotel Kosmos, where they are staying. They screamed with joy.
1. Various views of children visiting planetarium, modern art exhibition, show pieces, museum guides. 00:00 -- 02:37
2. Various views of children taking classes in handicrafts, hip-hop dancing. 02:37 -- 04:10
3. Vladimir Ovcharenko, founder of the Red October Gallery: (speaking English):
We are so far, but you feel its your country, it is the Russian people, so you feel that it is very close to your life. You always think, OK, so what can I do personally to help some people? First you can just send them money or maybe you can do something more.
I called to a couple of them and asked them: Do you like the idea of doing a charity auction to sell some works to help the children of Krymsk? And I got the same second good reaction so I said hey, let's go.
They don't recommend that we remind them about that. So we don't talk about bad things, we talk about good things, about Moscow, about cultural centers, about museums, about good weather, good food, you know? So they have to get good emotions. They need it.
04:10 -- 05:11
4. Natalia, chaperone (speaking Russian):
These are children who live in adopted families and those who suffered from the flood. When we arrived in Moscow they were all very excited, you should have seen their reaction to the hotel Kosmos, where they are staying. They screamed with joy.
05:11 -- 05:41
5. Ruslan, a boy from Krymsk (speaking Russian):
My parent work night shift, so I was alone. I had to climb to the roof, and had to wait there and then climbed over into the house of our neighbors.
05:41 - 05:48
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Record Moscow Crowds Spend Hours in -20 Freeze for Patriotic Painter Exhibit
More daily reality snacks at:
Exhibition of famous Russian painter Serov in Moscow generates huge public attention
Source NTV
Russia: Super-stealth Kolpino submarine arrives for deployment to Black Sea
A so-called super-stealth submarine called the Kolpino was officially handed over to the Russian Navy in St. Petersburg on Thursday. Addressing the officers, crew, and others in attendance, the Admiral of the submarine Vladimir Korolev described it as a significant event.
After the Admiral's address, the Russian navy's St. Andrew flag was hoisted, as a symbol of the acceptance of the ship. At the conclusion of the event, sailors sang the Russian anthem and put on a fireworks display.
Video ID: 20161124 029
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NASTY MONDAYS COME BACK TO MOSCOW, OCTOBER 2015
24th October Nasty Mondays @ Rolling Stone Bar, Moscow (Russia)