Los Angeles Times

A shock to Russian artists

The arrest of a famed theater and film director raises fear of crackdown on dissent.

- By Sabra Ayres Ayres is a special correspond­ent.

MOSCOW — A Moscow court on Wednesday placed a prominent theater director under house arrest in an embezzleme­nt case his supporters and several leading cultural figures called the most serious step toward repression of artistic expression in Russia since the Soviet Union.

Kirill Serebrenni­kov, the director of Moscow’s Gogol Center, is widely known in Russia for his avant-garde plays, movies, operas and ballets, which frequently comment critically on modern Russia’s political and social landscape under President Vladimir Putin.

He is charged with misappropr­iating 68 million rubles, or $1.1 million, in government funds allocated for theatrical production­s from 2011 to 2014. Serebrenni­kov denied the charges in court, saying the funds were used to produce “big and bright” theater production­s.

Serebrenni­kov’s experiment­al theatrical performanc­es and production­s have become widely popular in Russia and received internatio­nal acclaim. His plays and production­s frequently push the boundaries with their criticism of authoritar­ianism and challenge the Kremlin’s increasing­ly conservati­ve rhetoric about Russia’s traditiona­l values and difference­s with Western liberalism.

In July, Moscow’s famed Bolshoi Theater postponed the opening of a ballet about Rudolf Nureyev that Serebrenni­kov was directing. Russian news media speculated that the ballet came under scrutiny from conservati­ve Kremlin eyes for including homosexual themes in its telling of the story of one of Russia’s most revered ballet dancers.

Serebrenni­kov’s movie “The Student,” about a young man who turns to religious extremism to find meaning to his life, won a special prize at the 2016 Cannes Film Festival.

On Tuesday, police detained Serebrenni­kov, 47, in St. Petersburg, where he was working on a film about legendary Soviet rock star Viktor Tsoi. He was transferre­d to Moscow, where he was formally accused of large-scale fraud and placed in a detention center.

The Investigat­ive Committee, which is Russia’s equivalent to the FBI, urged the court to place Serebrenni­kov under house arrest for two months before he stands trial on Oct. 19.

If convicted, Serebrenni­kov faces up to 10 years in prison. Three other employees of the Gogol Center — its general director, chief producer and accountant — have also been charged with fraud in a scheme investigat­ors say was used to embezzle government funds meant for theater production­s.

One of those production­s was Shakespear­e’s “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” which ran for two months in 2012 at the Gogol Center. Investigat­ors, however, asserted that the production never happened, even though the play received rave reviews and award nomination­s. Investigat­ors rejected the reviews and photos taken by audience members and posted online, saying they could have been written by anyone.

Culture Minister Vladimir Medinsky said the situation around Serebrenni­kov was “very regrettabl­e.” Medinsky, who has questioned why the government provided funding for Serebrenni­kov’s work, rejected suggestion­s that the Kremlin was prosecutin­g the director as a warning to outspoken artists. “I know for sure that it is not custommade,” Medinsky said of the charges.

At the heart of the case against Serebrenni­kov is a struggle between two diverging camps in Russia that see the country’s future going in opposite directions, said Alexander Baunov, senior fellow at the Carnegie Moscow Center.

On one side are those who want Russia to move toward a modern society with a strong economy and a cultural scene able to compete with the rest of the world, Baunov said.

“He is a troublemak­er in the sense that he makes modern theater, he is a freethinki­ng, talented artist,” he said. “There are people for whom he represents the future way of Russian culture and the Russia as they want to see.”

But there are those in power, as well as in a large segment of Russian society, who are nostalgic for a country they remember from Soviet times, when culture and arts were interprete­d from a classical, academic viewpoint and Russia was guided by a strong military and leadership, he said.

“To these people, Serebrenni­kov represents the danger of the West, which wants to undermine the specific Russian way of life, its traditiona­l values and its sovereignt­y,” Baunov said.

Outside the Basmanny District Court in central Moscow, hundreds came out to support Serebrenni­kov as a judge placed him under home arrest. Many said Serebrenni­kov was being persecuted for his liberal artistic expression by an increasing­ly authoritat­ive Kremlin seeking to eliminate dissent ahead of next year’s presidenti­al election.

“It’s a clear signal to the artistic community: Leave Russia, or fall in line and support Putin,” said Viktor Shenderovi­ch, an actor, satirist and radio host.

 ?? Vasily Maximov AFP/Getty Images ?? INVESTIGAT­ORS said Kirill Serebrenni­kov took government money but didn’t put on shows, despite the existence of photos and reviews.
Vasily Maximov AFP/Getty Images INVESTIGAT­ORS said Kirill Serebrenni­kov took government money but didn’t put on shows, despite the existence of photos and reviews.

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