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The history of Russian literature, music, ballet, and drama includes
some of the greatest artists and works ever produced. Much of this
art flowered in Russia during the 19th century, and major cultural
figures of the period include such writers as Aleksandr Pushkin, Leo
Tolstoy, Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Nikolay Gogol, Ivan Turgenev, and Anton
Chekhov, and such composers as Mikhail Glinka, Peter Tchaikovsky,
Nikolay Rimsky-Korsakov, Modest Mussorgsky, and Aleksandr Borodin.
Drama, ballet, and opera also have their traditions rooted in the
19th century; a prominent figure in theater at this time was
Konstantin Stanislavski, who founded the Moscow Art Theater in 1898.
Under the influence of the Soviet government, however, Russian
cultural works of the 20th century were heavily censored, and many
outstanding writers and artists were stifled or forced to publish
their works abroad. The great tradition of Russian literature was
carried on by a few writers of the Soviet period, such as Maksim
Gorkiy, Vladimir Mayakovsky, Boris Pasternak, Mikhail Sholokhov, and
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn. Solzhenitsyn was exiled in the 1970s because
of his controversial work, which includes the famous novel One Day
in the Life of Ivan Denisovich (1962; translated 1963); Solzhenitsyn
returned to Russia in 1994. See Also Russian Literature.
Music, dance (especially classical ballet), and film fared
somewhat better during the Soviet period. Famous composers of the
period included Dmitry Shostakovich and Sergey Prokofiev. Important
filmmakers of the early Soviet period were Sergey Eisenstein, known
for his mastery of montage; Lev Kuleshov; and Vsevold Pudovkin.
Andrey Tarkovsky, who lived abroad from the late 1960s until his
death in 1986, was one of the most notable directors of the late
Soviet period.
Russian achievements in literature, music, ballet, and drama are
also well represented in a wide variety of cultural institutions.
Russia maintains a huge number of museums of all kinds, including
outdoor museums of architectural preservation. Most of the country's
major cultural institutions are in Moscow and Saint Petersburg. Best
known to tourists are the Hermitage Museum in Saint Petersburg, one
of the world's great museums, and the Armory Museum in the Moscow
Kremlin. Also in Moscow are the Tretyakov Gallery, with a collection
devoted to Russian art, the Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts, the
Folk-Art Museum, and the Museum of the Revolution, as well as many
other smaller, more specialized collections. The Permanent
Exhibition of National Economic Achievements in Moscow offers a
large display of contemporary achievements in science, industry, and
agriculture. To the northeast of Moscow there is a string of a
half-dozen old kremlin (citadel) towns that served as seats of
government for city-states during the Middle Ages. These have been
restored as part of a tourist circuit known as the Golden Ring.
Russia also has thousands of libraries of various kinds. Best
known is the Russian State Library in Moscow, which houses more than
30 million volumes in some 250 languages-one of the largest library
collections in the world. Other leading libraries include the M. E.
Saltykov-Shchedrin Public Library in Saint Petersburg, with about
28.5 million volumes; the Library of the Russian Academy of
Sciences, with about 19 million volumes; and Moscow State University
Library, with about 6.6 million volumes.
The best-known theaters in Moscow are the Bolshoi ("Big")
Theater, the Maly ("Small") Theater, and the Moscow Art Theater. In
addition, many of the larger productions of the Bolshoi ballet and
opera troupes are presented in the Kremlin Palace of Congresses,
which seats 6000 people. Other theaters of note in Moscow are the
Central Children's Theater, the Obraztsov Puppet Theater, the Moscow
Art Theater, the Stanislavsky and Nemirovich-Danchenko Musical
Theater, the Operetta Theater, and the Theater Art Institute. Saint
Petersburg has the Mariinskiy Theater of Opera and Ballet, the Maly
Theater, and the Pushkin Dramatic Theater.
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