The most notable cultural emblem of 1990s Russia rises from an island in
the middle of the Moscow River. Peter the Great stands 196 feet tall. His
feet, spread wide, are planted on a base of buildings that look as though
they might have been stamped from lumps of dough. Even more incongruously,
they fill the hull of an enormous sailing ship whose prow juts out across
the water. In one hand, Peter holds a tiller; in the other, he holds aloft a
golden scroll. The ship stands on a thick column, bulky as a baobab,
from which the bows of other ships protrude. Their bowsprits support
metal flags,
crossed with diagonal bands of gold, that pivot in the breeze.
The statue has drawn a lot of attention. Completed last year at a cost of
$20 million, it was commissioned by Moscow Mayor Yuri Luzhkov and built by
his court sculp-
tor, a maneuverable Georgian by the name of Zurab Tsereteli.
Many people in Moscow hate the thing. For a while several gallery
owners, eloquently invoking their newly acquired democratic rights, talked
loudly about collecting signatures for a referen-
dum on the statue’s
removal. None of those plans ever went beyond the talking stage, though,
and the word these days is that the mayor quietly salved the ire of his
opponents by awarding them lucrative city contracts. If Moscow were the
kind of place where honesty is rewarded, one could argue that the mayor was
merely exercising a