Police in Russia have seized a painting 
depicting the country's president Vladimir Putin in women's underwear 
from an art gallery in St Petersburg.
                        
                        Earlier this month an interviewer asked 
Vladimir Putin about Russia’s draconian crackdown on the rights of gays 
and lesbians, who have suffered violent reprisals since the passage of a
 discriminatory law this May. Putin defended the law, but insisted he 
had no problems with gay people – and chose a surprising example to 
prove it. “They say that Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky was a homosexual,” 
the Russian president said. “Truth be told, we don’t love him because of that, but he was a great musician, and we all love his music. So what?”
It’s
 a tiny comfort to hear that the composer of Swan Lake and The 
Nutcracker doesn’t meet with presidential condemnation. But Tchaikovsky –
 who wrote to his brother about his “
cursed buggermania”,
 and who fell so in love with his own nephew that he dedicated his 
aching 6th Symphony to him – has become, in his own way, a victim of 
Russia’s new suppressions. A biopic of Tchaikovsky’s life that’s 
currently in production presents the composer as a heartbroken straight 
man. According to a reporter for Russian newspaper Novaya Gazeta, an 
earlier draft of the screenplay acknowledged his love for men, but the 
film’s screenwriter now says that “only philistines” believe the 
overwhelming evidence of Tchaikovsky’s homosexuality.
And in New 
York, Tchaikovsky is at the centre of another controversy. On 23 
September, the Metropolitan Opera launches its new season with a gala 
premiere of Eugene Onegin, the composer’s greatest opera. Opera 
companies plan their schedules years in advance, of course, but now the 
Met finds itself mounting a production by a gay Russian composer, 
featuring two noted Putin supporters. Anna Netrebko, the soprano singing
 Tatiana, endorsed Putin’s return to the presidency last year; Valery 
Gergiev, who’ll be conducting, is an even bigger Putin fan.
A chorus of disapproval
A storm has arisen, and more than 7,500 people have signed 
an online petition
 calling on the Met to dedicate its opening night gala of Eugene Onegin 
to the cause of LGBT rights. The petition hasn’t succeeded, but it’s had
 an impact all the same. Netrebko, who is headlining her third 
consecutive Met opening night (and who can 
count Putin as a fan),
 posted this mild but welcome note on Facebook: “As an artist, it is my 
great joy to collaborate with all of my wonderful colleagues – 
regardless of their race, ethnicity, religion, gender, or sexual 
orientation. I have never and will never discriminate against anyone.”
But Gergiev has kept quieter. The conductor is a 
committed Putinite; he speaks of the president as a 
new Peter the Great,
 and his relationship with him made it possible to build the massive new
 Mariinsky Theater in St Petersburg that opened this year. Gergiev, who 
is now the richest musician in Russia of any genre, is not retiring 
about his patriotism. He played a concert to celebrate Russia’s brutal 
military campaign in South Ossetia. He spoke in favour of the decision 
to imprison Pussy Riot, the Russian feminist rock band. This May Putin 
presented him with a recently revived Soviet-era prize, the Hero of 
Labour award; and he is also an ‘
ambassador’ for next year’s Winter Olympics in Sochi, which are facing concerted protests.
Should
 artists be held responsible for their governments’ actions? It’d be 
absurd for every American singer or painter to have to answer for their 
country’s NSA spying program or gun laws. Nor should Chinese artists 
have to speak out in favour of Tibetan rights before they get a hearing 
abroad. Yet art is not some pure territory uninfected by ideology, and 
some artists, due to both their personal activities and their artistic 
inclinations, deserve special scrutiny. Gergiev is a tireless advocate 
of the Russian repertory: at the Met alone he has led revelatory 
performances of Prokofiev’s War and Peace and The Gambler, which had 
never been heard in New York before. Still, I’m glad that Gergiev’s 
intimacy with the Putin government is getting more attention. We 
shouldn’t allow his artistic gifts to excuse his political sympathies 
any more than we do with Wilhelm Furtwängler, the Nazi who was probably 
the greatest Wagner conductor ever.
Mission impossible? 
A
 thornier question remains, though. What should the Met do? What 
responsibilities does the Met, as an arts organization, have to global 
gay rights and to the political realm more generally? In rejecting the 
online petition, which garnered the signatures of several major figures 
at the Met, the house’s general manager Peter Gelb deployed a 
‘some-of-my-best-friends-are-gay’ defence to sidestep any awkwardness. 
“The Met is proud of its history as a creative base for LGBT singers, 
conductors, directors, designers, and choreographers,” the statement 
said. “But since our mission is artistic, it is not appropriate for our 
performances to be used by us for political purposes, no matter how 
noble or right the cause.”
But an artistic mission has never 
precluded political engagement. Quite the opposite: arts organisations 
get involved with politics all the time, and so they should. Nobody 
thought it was inappropriate when museums worldwide agitated for the 
freedom of Ai Weiwei, the imprisoned Chinese artist, in 2011; Tate 
Modern in London even wrote ‘RELEASE AI WEIWEI’ in giant letters on its 
façade. The Schaubühne in Berlin, perhaps the most important theatre in 
Europe today, produces plays alongside an intelligent and aggressive 
public lecture series called Streitraum, or ‘conflict room’, in which 
artists and scholars regularly condemn the Merkel government’s economic 
and political policies. Several opera companies, notably the Bayerische 
Staatsoper in Munich and De Nederlandse Opera in Amsterdam, publish 
magazines that engage with political events; when the Munich house 
mounted a production of Boris Godunov this spring, it used the occasion 
to speak out in support of Pussy Riot. (All of these institutions, I’d 
add, receive government funding.)
The Met could take any of these 
routes. It could also devote the intermission features of its highly 
popular HD broadcasts or radio simulcasts to a discussion of Russia’s 
gay crackdown. Yet the Met has no artistic director who can lead the 
house towards political engagement, and the American model of arts 
funding – which leaves institutions dependent on ultra-wealthy 
benefactors who may not relish a political fight – means change is 
unlikely.
There is, though, one salutary effect of the brouhaha 
around the Met’s Onegin: at least it has called public attention to the 
homosexuality of Tchaikovsky, who like so many great Russian cultural 
figures – Nikolai Gogol and Sergei Diaghilev come to mind – would face 
arrest or worse in contemporary Moscow or St Petersburg. His love and 
longing cannot be erased from his music; it’s right there, fundamental 
to the work. One person who understood that was Anthony Minghella, the 
late British director whose thriller The Talented Mr. Ripley utilises 
Eugene Onegin in a key scene. Matt Damon’s conman Ripley, after killing 
his beloved Dickie, played by Jude Law, goes to see Onegin at the Teatro
 dell’Opera in Rome. And as Tchaikovsky’s music swells, and two male 
singers stare at each other in passion and anger, the camera cuts to 
Ripley with tears streaming down his face.
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