Pussy Riot

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Group.png Pussy Riot  Rdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
Pussy Riot.jpg
InterestsVladimir Putin
Interest ofSimon Ostrovsky

Pussy Riot is a Russian protest group founded in August 2011. The group received global publicity by the commercially-controlled media when five members of the group staged a performance inside Moscow's Cathedral of Christ the Saviour on February 21, 2012.[1]

Activites

The group staged provocative performances in public places that were filmed as music videos and posted on the Internet. The group's lyrical themes included feminism, LGBT rights, opposition to Russian President Vladimir Putin and his policies, and Putin's links to the leadership of the Russian Orthodox Church.

Vice (Feb 20, 2014): Pussy Riot Gets Whipped in Sochi [2] - at the end some Russian boys want to hand frozen chickens to Nadezhda Tolokonnikova and Maria Alyokhina, an allusion to another performance of the VOINA Art Group in a supermarket.[3][4]

VOINA Art Group

Pussy Riot is an offspring of the Voina (lit. “War”) art collective (VOINA Art Group),[4][5] whose performance art included:[6][7]

  • staging of a public porn scene at the Timiryazev Museum in Moscow;[8][9]
  • the staged hanging of an immigrant and a homosexual in a supermarket; [10]
  • the painting of a male phallus on a St. Petersburg Bridge;[10]

According to other accounts also:[11]

  • the overturning of police cars;[10]
  • the firebombing of property with petrol bombs;

Appearances in media/entertainment

Full article: Hollywood

Nadezhda Tolokonnikova and Maria Alyokhina were playing themselves in the third season of House of Cards, as in real live at odds with the president of the Russian Federation.[12][13][14]


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References