Dancers: Marusya Night Club

Denis Sinyakov, “Dancers from the Marusya Night Club, Moscow”, Photo Shoot

Born in Moscow in 1977, Denis Sinyakov is a Moscow based freelance photographer and videographer. He has had twenty years of experience in still and film photography including four years with the Agence France Press from 2003 to 2007 and five years with Reuters from 2997 to 2012, both based in Moscow. He also has a history of freelance work as photographer and videographer. 

Sinyakov has done work for Der Speigel magazine; Helsingin Sanomat, Liberation, News week, Sunday Times, CNN, Al Jezeera, Geo, TV Rain, the Medoza Project, and Greenpeace, International. Sinyakov places an emphasis on social and environmental issues, with a particular focus on the former Soviet republics and Russia. 

On the 19th of September in 2013, Denis Sinyakov and twenty-eight crew members of Greenpeace ship Arctic Sunrise were captured by Russian Federal Security Service agents in an international waters. He had been covering protest actions against oil exploration in the Arctic. Sinyakov, another journalist and the crew members were accused of piracy and then of hooliganism. Sinyakov was sentenced to two months in prison in Murmansk and then in Saint Petersburg. On the 24th of December in 2013, Russia granted amnesty to all thirty hostages from the Arctic Sunrise icebreaker.

Note: The Marusya is a nightclub-cabaret for women that is located in central Moscow. In addition to dancing routines and drink, special entertainments are arranged for single prosperous women willing to pay for private attention and time with a handsome male employee of the club. According to club rules, a man is required to stay with the female guest anywhere between half an hour to a couple of hours, depending on how much she pays.

Leave a Reply