Showing posts with label Moscow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Moscow. Show all posts

Munching in Moscow: Part 5

Moscow, September 1990—After a seven-day transit across Siberia, we “clickety-clack’t” into Moscow’s central station a day late. It was midnight and the city was closed. Half asleep, I toddled past a train parked on the tracks to the side of the station. The sleeping cars had been converted into dormitories.


“How much does a bunk cost per night?” I yawned in Russian.

Tri dollara,” the pseudo-conductor warbled somberly.

“Do you have two vacant bunks?” I proceeded.

Nyet!” he huffed.

I had been broken into the system by the linebackers on the Trans-Siberian. I asked him if he had any empty bunks that went for four “dollara.” Suddenly one was available! I was able to get a good night sleep.

“Everyone out!” the corpulent nose guard clamored at daybreak.

Clad with backpack, I wended my way through the streets in search of the reasonably priced boarding house that someone on the train had mentioned to me in passing. Although the layover in Moscow was reduced by twenty-four hours, I still had a day’s wait before departing for Bulgaria. Mesmerized by the surroundings, I stood dead center in Red Square as I gaped in all directions.

The handwriting on the wall was plain as day. The economy had taken a nosedive. The empire was on the verge of collapse. Its foundation was incurably cracked. Although the tumble would not reverberate audibly like the rubble of the Berlin Wall, which was plowed away by bulldozers, its crash would shake the world within a matter of months when the Soviet Republics would splinter off into over a dozen independent States.


The reality of a crumbled Berlin Wall hit me even stronger as I passed by a line of nearly one thousand people that snaked out of McDonald’s and down the boulevard. There were shorter lines everywhere. Whenever more than two shoppers stopped in front of a store, other passers-by flocked to the scene. I stepped into one gathering.

“What are we waiting for?” someone yelped.

I expressed my ignorance with “Ya nye znah-yoo.”

Shpaaghyetee!” howled another voice.

When I tracked down a boarding house and rang the bell. An artist who restored icons greeted me warmly at the door with “Alyosha.” I introduced myself.

Alyosha escorted me through a dark hall to the accommodations: rolled-out mats on the floor of a living room. In the spirit of adventure, I agreed to stay. I did have some mixed feelings after I caught the cats squirting the duffel bags of other guests that lay on the floor. “Hmm, that’s a foul smell to travel with...hard to get out, too!” I debated. Making the best of the situation, I delved into a conversation with Alyosha, who flipped over my Moskòvsky aktsènt!

“How long have you been in Moscow?” he pried.

“Twelve hours!” I snickered.

“You learned Russian in twelve hours?” he spouted with panic.

“No, that would take about three months,” I joked. “One of my majors was Russian.”

Alyosha phoned his cousins, Boris and Natasha, to host me for the night. What a relief to escape the cats!


On the morrow, his cousins insisted that I eat breakfast before I aligned my steps for the train station. Plunking two bowls of cottage cheese topped with a heaping glob of sour cream, “Tvorog! Eeeat!” commanded Natasha.

A mite hardier than the noodle soup I had been in the habit of eating in Asia, I shoveled down the dairy delight in gratitude of my host’s hospitality. And thank goodness, I did!

En route to Bulgaria, the dining car had been detached from the train. On board, there was no way to change money into the local currencies, which put out of reach the possibility of purchasing a snack through the window on stops. In a nutshell, the weight of the tvorog carried me through the two days of an unchosen fast!

Follow this series:
Part 2: Cracks in the Berlin Wall
Part 3: Shifting Gears: from China to Eastern Europe
Part 4: Calm, Cool, and...Calamity?
Part 5: Munching in Moscow: Part 5

Photo top left Yaroslavsky Terminal by AndyVolykhov, GNU Free Documentation License at Wikipedia.
Photo center right Red Square by Stoljaroff, Public Domain at Wikipedia.
Photo bottom left German tvorog GNU Free Documentation License at Wikipedia.

Francesco's Travels: Table of Contents

Balkans/Eastern Europe
BulgariaSurviving in Sofia: Part 1
Basically Bulgarian: Part 2
The Turkish Touch: Part 3
One for the Ladies!
The Cultural Heritage of Petar Petrov
Greece apaptform—Where Greece Meets Japan
Macedonia Marjan Pejoski & Kokon To Zai
RomaniaGypsies, Vampires, and Rozalb de Mura
SerbiaThe Dominant Strength of Serbia's Dejan Despotović
SloveniaSENS, Feeling the Touch of Slovenian Class!
TurkeyTurkish Anyone?
Mediterranean Isles & Coasts
Intro The Mediterranean Isles of Italy
Western Europe
BelgiumMoutonCollet: Sometimes Silence is Silver
Veronique Branquinho & the Antwerp Six...or Seven?
PortugalSalsa Jeans Adds Some Spice to Bread & Butter Berlin
SpainToledo—the City of Three Cultures
Italy
IschiaIschia: Roots on a Rim
MacerataElia Maurizi & "Who Is On Next"
NaplesIschia: Roots on a Rim
PompeiiFrom the Ashes of Pompeii
San Marino San Marino: Still Paving the Way
SardiniaWelcome to Cagliari
When in Sardinia, Eat as the Sardinians...and with them!
Nora: from Phoenicia to Carthage and onto Rome
The Nuraghic People, "Su Nuraxi" & UNESCO
Sardinian Nuraghis Rock!
Tharros: Nuraghic Foundation
Tharros: from Phoenicia to Carthage & onto Rome
Bauladu—Country Living in Sardinia
Oristano: Its Musuem & Festivals
Alghero—Sardina’s Little Catalonia
Antonio Marras—the Designer from Alghero

Sulcis—the Why to it All
The Nuraghic “People of Bronze” Come Back to Life
Russia
Former USSR My Romance with the Color Red
Cracks in the Berlin Wall
Shifting Gears: from China to Eastern Europe
Calm, Cool, and...Calamity?
Munching in Moscow
Siberia Hayam Hanukaev Sets Russian Fashion Week Free
North America
PhiladelphiaMatthew Izzo Presents Wrath Arcane at 1st Friday
Philadelphia Fashion Week—a “First” Definitely Not to Be Missed!
China
BeijingHappy Chinese New Year!
Designer Chi Zhang's Northern Capital of Fashion
My SojournMenswear—Not Just Fashion: Focus on China
A Culture Vulture at Heart
Trained by Trains

"Trained" Foriegn Experts
First Impressions
Social Divide
Chomping around China
When in Rome....
Workers—Another Kind of Army
Guizhou Minorities in the 80's
Miao People—All about Fashion
Zhuang Fashion
Yao Men, Yao Women—the Differences Pervade Them All
The Song of the Dong
Yi Fashion
Southeast Asia
Thailand

Bangkok, Menswear & Darwin's Beagle

The Energetically Charged Bags & Accessories of Maxim Sharov

Maxim Sharov was born and raised in Zheleznodorozhny, a city located 21 km outside of Moscow, where he now resides. Zheleznodorozhny—which translates as ‘railway’—was founded in 1861 as a settlement that served the train station of Obiralovka. The settlement gained its fame by Leo Tolstoy as the place of death for the main character in Anna Karenina.

I had the privilege of interviewing this Russian designer of men's accessories last week. Luckily for me, Russian language and literature was my major in university—even reading Anna Karenina in the original!—so I was able to conduct the interview in Maxim’s native language and feel his passion in designing bags for men.

When growing up in Zheleznodorozhny, what was it that influenced you to become a designer?
What influenced my decision to become a designer was that, for some time in my childhood, I was a punker and, afterwards, a hippy. Then, it came to me to make various accessories that would correspond to the ways of such subcultures.

Where did you go to school?
I completed my studies at the Faculty of Applied Art of the Moscow State Textile University ‘A.N. Kosygin’. Although I entered as a major in shoe wear, in the course of my studies I chose to major as a designer of bags, receiving my degree in the year 2000.

So when did you first start designing bags?
I started designing 18 years ago, when I was only 15 years old.

And what do you find inspires you when you design?
I’m not inspired by the mere purpose of fashion or style but rather by things that are created for practical purposes, such as the elements of workers’ clothes or military ammunition. I like things that can be used for a long time, not looking to the variability of fashion but rather to things that have confirmed their usefulness.

Could you give a percentage for the amount of practicality vs. style?
90% practicality, 10% style.

How do you perceive life, and do you express this perception in your accessories?
I read that things, as well as everything around us, have energy and this energy largely depends on how the things were made and the emotions that were felt in making them. If something is created by one person who conceived the idea, then this thing is energetically more powerful than something that was made in a manufacturing line where one person performs only one operation and then passes it to another.

You’ve made a very strong case for the artisan! So, with what types of materials do you like to work?
Yes, in general, I only work with leather. For this reason, I love to buy leather not only of the best quality but also leather with defects, scratches, holes, and impressions that appear naturally.

I’m always at your disposal to answer more questions with great pleasure. Спасибо!



Slide show Copyright by Maxim Sharov.

Russian Fashion Week & Oleg Biryukov's Mosaic of Talent

Today Russian Fashion Week opened the doors at the Congress Center in Moscow, where numerous Russian and foreign designers will be presenting their 2009 a/w collections throughout the next week. One of the exhibiting menswear designers is Oleg Biryukov, who drew inspiration for his collection from the art and dress of the Byzantine Empire.

Mostly everyone knows something about ancient Rome, the center of the Roman Empire. But how often do you watch a movie or read a novel on Byzantium, the capital of the Eastern Roman Empire? Eventually Byzantium came to be called Constantinople—the New Rome—and later, Istanbul!

What we term the Byzantine Empire merely refers to the Medieval Roman Empire that continued in the East as an economic power, trading heavily in textiles! What we must bear in mind, however, was that Byzantium was a Greek speaking empire of Greek culture. Although Byzantine dress was considered conservative, the Byzantines adored bright colors and elaborate patterns of embroidered imagery, worn primarily by the upper classes.

After the fall of Constantinople in 1453, Moscow claimed succession to the legacy of the Eastern Roman Empire, becoming the Third Rome—hence the title of “Tsar,” which mutated from ‘Cesar’! Hinting to the painted glass and colored enamels in the Byzantine mosaics, Oleg Biryukov continues the legacy at Russian Fashion Week!

Piecing emerald and purple on the backdrop of blue and gold, Oleg enforces the strict norms and canons of Byzantine iconography, which depicts the physical world as a mere reflection of heavenly realities. Instead of hiding behind pretty words or embellished ideas, Oleg exemplifies the truth that modesty can beautify!

Photos Copyright by Oleg B!ryukov.