The Russian authorities are increasingly interfering with the programs of the country's museums and art galleries to ensure that they reflect national values
The Russian Ministry of Culture's Department of Museums and Foreign Relations has The State Tretyakov Gallery in its sights. Image: Courtesy of Gallery Tretiakov©
With artists in exile overseas and exhibitions closed, contemporary art has been in Moscow's sights since Russia's 2022 invasion of Ukraine. The Russian authorities are increasingly interfering with the programs of the country's museums and art galleries to ensure that they reflect national values.
The State Tretyakov Gallery in Moscow is one institution that's been on the receiving end of this pressure. Its general director, Zelfira Tregulova, recently received a letter signed by the deputy director of the Russian Ministry of Culture's Department of Museums and Foreign Relations, Natalia Chechel, asking her to rethink some of her exhibitions, according to the Moscow Times. The reason? They are supposedly at odds with the state's policy "to preserve and strengthen traditional Russian spiritual and moral values," in accordance with Presidential Decree 809, which took effect on November 9, 2022.
This letter follows a complaint addressed to the Ministry of Culture by a man named Sergei Shadrin. The latter reportedly felt a deep feeling of uneasiness and distress after having seen works of contemporary art on show in the Moscow gallery representing funerals or scenes of drunkenness, for example. Such creations apparently show "signs of a destructive ideology," he explained in his complaint, a copy of which was seen by the Moscow Times.
It seems that Sergei Shadrin was particularly shocked by a bronze statue of La Pietà by Alexander Burganov, dating from 1978. He sees the Russian sculptor's decision not to include the face of the Virgin Mary as a "devilish interpretation" of religious history.
The State Tretyakov Gallery now has until February 6 to report on the compliance of the content of its exhibitions to the Russian Ministry of Culture's Department of Museums and Foreign Relations. Russian authorities are accustomed to this kind of intimidation, according to a museum employee. "We are dealing with a typical Soviet way of dealing with objectionable art," they told the Moscow Times anonymously.