The new station was decorated with black and white marble mosaics of scenes from Dostoevsky's most famous novels, including Crime and Punishment, Demons, The Idiot and The Brothers Karamazov. But unsurprisingly for a writer famously preoccupied with death, the scenes include images of suicide and murder. On one wall, Rodion Raskolnikov from Crime and Punishment brandishes an axe over the elderly pawnbroker Alyona Ivanovna and her sister, his murder victims in the novel. Near by, a character from Demons holds a pistol to his temple.

The fate of the murals is now in the hands of Moscow's Mayor, Yuri Luzhkov, a man familiar with controversial public art. His love of monolithic bronzes by the Georgian sculptor Zurab Tsereteli has bitterly divided Muscovites. He recently had to back down from plans to put posters of Stalin up around the city for Victory Day.
Whatever the Mayor decides, Ivan Nikolaev, the artist behind the murals, is unapologetic. "What did you want? Scenes of dancing? Dostoevsky doesn't have them," he said. "I tried to convey Dostoevsky as a man, an artist, a philosopher."
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