Having to get around on public transit
has always been appealing to me. Once I learned that many of the Moscow Metro
stations are designed by artists, I gave
myself a challenge: Visit and photograph EVERY metro station in Moscow.
I have been constantly looking online
for things we need to experience in the city and I stumbled across this from www.essortment.com:
"The Moscow Metro
is unlike any other metro system in the world. Stalin believed that instead of
providing decent housing for all of the citizens of the USSR, it was better to
build less living accommodations and more "palaces of the people".
These "palaces" were public buildings, monuments, and parks that were
architecturally impressive and decorated top to bottom in pro-soviet images and
were meant to serve as a matter of pride and enjoyment for the Soviet citizens.
The metro is one of the finest examples of this theory.
The downtown stations
are filled with valuable artworks such as murals, statues and mosaics as well
as crystal chandeliers and marble archways and benches. Each station was
designed by a prominent Soviet architect or artist. It is said that much of the
marble used in the metro systems were lifted from churches that the soviet
government demolished. In fact, the famous, and now re-built Cathedral of
Christ the Savior, provided marble and decorative elements for several of the
stations".
Needless to say, this intrigued me
even more with the Moscow Metro.
I have been on the metro quite a few
times now and the artwork and "palaces" are not at every station,
however I still plan on seeing my challenge through...EVERY station!!! Wish me
luck and stay tuned...