PUSSY RIOT Challenging hegemonic institutions, injustice, and boring headwear. Credit: Shorefire Media

PUSSY RIOT Challenging hegemonic institutions, injustice, and boring headwear.

PUSSY RIOT Challenging hegemonic institutions, injustice, and boring headwear. Shorefire Media

About six years ago, a group of women wearing colorful balaclavas made international headlines after storming Moscow’s Cathedral of Christ the Savior, thrashing around the altar, and chanting, “Virgin Mary, Mother of God, put Putin away.”

They belonged to Pussy Riot, the anti-Kremlin protest collective and feminist punk band that formed shortly after Vladimir Putin’s return to the presidency in 2011. Following the “Punk Prayer” demonstration, Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, Maria Alyokhina, and Yekaterina Samutsevich were imprisoned and charged with “hooliganism motivated by religious hatred”โ€“an ironic conviction, given the group’s frequent criticism of Russia’s lack of separation between church and state. The highly publicized trial resulted in the sentencing of Tolokonnikova and Alyokhina to two years in a penal colony (Samutsevich was freed on probation).

Formerly a senior editor and the music editor at the Mercury, CK Dolan writes about music, movies, TV, the death industry, and pickles.