Author: place2place

  • in 1866 Tchaikovsky was appointed professor of theory and harmony

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    Last night Stefan's piano teacher Karill performed at the Tchaikovsky Conservatory. We went with our friend Aleen, who is the worst back seat driver ever, and makes everything more fun. Karill and a violinist played Beethoven's Sonata #7. The conservatory has two halls, a malinki (small) and a bolshoi (large), and has performances nearly every evening. 

    A Tuesday evening and our performance was packed. The regulars know the strengths of each performer, have their favorites, and are familiar with the pieces they will play–sort of the way we are with American Idol. Karill played beautifully and afterwords Stefan and Peter took flowers to him during his bow. Hopefully that wasn't a huge faux pas because no one else gave any of the men flowers. Or hopefully Karill can explain that we are stupid foreigners. Or maybe now the three of them are engaged, who knows? There were two more performers after the intermission, but we had to leave right after Karill played because Stefan was overcome by a severe case of full-body fidgets. On the way out the sound of many people playing different piano pieces drifted out of the open practice-room windows.

  • dancing lessons from god

    Peter's co-worker is on vacation in Denmark. After a couple extra days of paying $300 a night for a hotel room he and his family–they are referring to themselves as "volcano refugees"– are taking the train to Stockholm, then the ferry to Helsinki, where he can work and be back on Uncle Sam's dime. They are the only people I've ever heard of who are going to Helsinki to save money. 

    Peter's sister Nina was suppose to come visit us this week, but has now canceled, since her trip would only be a couple of days by the time she got here, if she could get here.

    Peter's two other sisters, visiting France for the first time, are still "stuck" in Paris. I wonder what they are doing that they didn't think they had time to do? I'm sure they'll enjoy living in France.

    Peter's flight to Berlin tomorrow has been canceled. A doc here from Kazakhstan en route to the conference is taking the train to Berlin–a thirty-hour ride. We were suppose to meet Peter in France next week-end. 

    People think the airports will open on Sunday afternoon. Like a volcano going off is on people time. This thing thinks in earth years. In 1851 it erupted off and on for two years. I'm not sure if we'll make it to France next week-end, or if we'll be taking a ship home this summer.

  • paska and kulich

    Paska2
    Every time I see the easter-cake kulich I buy one, yesterday we bought this medium size from the bakers at the church…but the real problem has been the cheesecake-like paska, because to me, how to you serve kulich without paska?  I talked to two people in two different grocery stores who had no idea what I was talking about. "Are you sure you're Russian?" I asked them. The one bakery that I knew was going to carry paska had run out by yesterday afternoon. Then today, there it was at the grocery store! Now we are set. Happy Easter!

  • the people’s palace

    Metro2 

    IMG_0039 

    Everyone is counting noses at school and work. I wondered why I heard sirens this morning.

    Two or maybe four bombs exploded on the Moscow Metro during the morning commute. Nobody knows how many or by whom, although immediately the Chenchens are blamed, which I deplore.

    The Kublianka metro is on the red line right in the very center of town at the Kremlin, a fifteen minute walk from our place. Hearing Park Kultury made my stomach clutch worse though. It's only two stops away, and was Stefan's stop when he was at the other campus. He rides the metro home from school every day on the red line, which stops at both Kublianka and Park Kultury. We'll have him come home by car until our brains wrap around this, the first bombing in Moscow since 2004.

    Just knowing my eight-year-old is on the red line every single weekday was enough to make me feel ill. My heart goes out to anyone who had a loved one on the metro this morning and had an hour or a even a minute wondering if they were okay; let alone anyone who had a family member injured or killed, I don't even know what to say or think. Cashmar. Nightmare. 

    The metro is so efficient, so good, I don't drive here. It's so impressive nearly every time I go, I take a photo. (Can you find the "Park Kultury" on the sign up there?) The metro is one of the best things about Moscow. Not today though.

    Me and peter on the metro

  • the mountain of old jewelry and icons comes to mohammed

    Images of the Paris flea market can-canned through my brain when I heard there was an antique fair in town. Wow, I thought, that's something I'd really like to do! Peter's not home and I can get lost on the wrong side of the metro station, with Russians not helping me, and 100-letter street names and I'll end up crying and I'll drag in late and kids will be like, "Where's dinner?" 

    Last December is fresh in my mind, yes, but I need to stretch myself!

    Plus,I really want a chandelier. Or old Easter postcards or something. Forget Port Clingoncourt, I miss Goodwill! The directions to the fair are complicated, strange metro stops and Big Gryushyaski Street is not the same as Gryushyaski Street but I really need to get out of my well-worn comfort zone and explore this huge, weird city!

    Wait, the fair is only one metro stop away. So much for exploring a new part of town, but that's cool, not as overwhelming. I carefully map out the unfamiliar-named streets in Cyrillic. Maybe I can walk, see something different, explore some new spots.

    According to the website, the antique fair is right off of a park I go to all the time for our farmer's market/grocery store run–I've been there a million times. I never noticed a hall for an antique market; I hope I can find the building.

    I don't know why anyone would take the metro, I walk to the park, it's maybe half a mile away. I don't see an exhibition hall or a sign or anything, which is not surprising. This is Moscow, you have to know someone to find out anything, and guess what? I don't know anyone! I wander through the farmer's market–wouldn't it be stupid if the flea market were here in the park? But no, it's not. I cross the street and wander the blocks around the park. I find a building with a banner, I crunch ice underfoot through an alley, a parking lot looks promising, but nothing. 
     
    In Niger they say WAAW: West Africa Always Wins, and now I haven't found the antiques fair but I have made up a new acronym: RAW.
     
    Well, I figured, since I'm here I might as well get bananas at the grocery store. Over the grocery store entrance is a banner that looks like the banner from the antiques fair web site. 

    The antiques fair is in the mall where I go the grocery store nearly every weekend.

    Flea_market_angel

  • not a dog treat, not chocolates, but widely available in moscow right now

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    "Quail eggs contain vitamins and minerals essential for good health," says the box. I adore the presumed knowledge of basic chemistry for the nutrition label.

  • when do we start working on the half pipe?

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    Remember back in the fall and the mayor of Moscow said he was going to manipulate the weather so it wouldn't snow? I think he's about two feet of snow away from being fired. There is Peter walking Bea. I love the snow here, it's super dry and powdery. The snow is taller than Bea and the neighbors are making an igloo. 
  • sergiev posad

    Sleigh

    We went to the country and the pictures are here. Bonfires, sleigh rides, vodka, come join us.
  • oh, bea

    Oh bea

    Bea is a really mellow puppy and so she suits our family well. She likes to help out in the kitchen.
  • in which we visit Chekhov’s house

    AC_house

    Sick of Chekhov yet? Me neither. Today is his 150th birthday.

    So today I went to his house, which you can probably see from the Embassy if you are in the right office. It's on Kudrinskya; I like saying it.

    I walked in and saw a sign that said, students, 60 rubles, foreigners, 100 rubles. There is probably a "local" price, which you are entitled to, with your embassy badge, but I didn't even try. 100 rubles = $3. To see Chekhov's house? I don't need to negotiate it down to $2.50. Then the lady came out of her little booth, took me by the arm, sweetly, to show me the sign in English that explains that the price posted is to take pictures. And no more than two pictures in each room. Okaaaaay.

    I'd worn fifteen layers of clothing, even though it's warmed up to 7F,  but I checked my coat. I get the feeling the coat check guy is a hoot, but I can't understand him, so I just laugh in a generalized, idiotic way. He offers me overshoes, which I decline, I don't want to be the only freak with overshoes.

    The first room is portraits and someone's parasol, maybe Chekhov's walking cane, I think I recognize it from photos, but who can tell? The lables are all in Russian. It's all cool though–parasols and canes and early playbills– I mean, no one loves ephemera more than I do. And hitting me in the face is the portrait I love, the one his brother painted. You know it by now.

    But there is another room! His sitting room! Where he received patients, and friends. Oh, only people like Tchikovsky, but, whatever! Check out his leather doctor bag and eye glasses. His desk and lamp, and here have a chair. You can sit and hang out for a while, commune with his ghost.

    Off the sitting room, on either side of the Carl Larson-esque stove, are his and his brother's rooms. Why do we have such huge beds now? Here is the bed Anton Chekhov slept in, and it's like a junior twin. I love the 19th century.

    AC_bedroom

    And it's all in dacha style with the tapetry on the wall, next to the bed. His mother made that tapestry. *dies*

    I'm fangirling over Anton Chekhov and his interiors. Fine. Also, there is a rug over the table in the sitting room. *rumages through closet to find rug to put on table*

    There's more, you can go upstairs, run your hand along the worn red velvet-covered handrail his sister loved. Upstairs, a piano his brother played in the mornings while Chekhov wrote downstairs. Chekov's favorite piece was Chopin's prelude #6. "Chopin is everyone's favorite," says Peter.

    His sister's room is upstairs. Her little sewing machine, her gray velvet-covered sofa. Could you die of love?

    AC sisters_couch

    So as I'm wandering around communing with every little thing, I notice I am the only clueless person not ruining the best short-story writer in the history of the universe's floor by not wearing overshoes.

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    Americans! We are so clueless, and dirty. And I took more than two pictures in some of the rooms too! But I evened it out by not taking ANY pictures in other rooms.

    You can see his playing cards, and his toothbrush, (ew, says Camille) prescriptions he'd written out, photos he'd taken and his dishes, and envelopes he'd made out of newsprint and tied with red string, (I'm so doing this) his waistcoat that closed with cuff-link-like buttons and pajamas embroidered with his initials, and hand-written manuscripts and little notebooks…his life, all right there to see. Everything and almost him.

    Chekhov collage circle

    Click and the collage will get bigger. Click on Moscow Photo a Day to find out more about Chekhov and his crazy-amazing life.