Lahda, the Russian Musical Dramatic Art Society
LAHDA, the Russian Musical Dramatic Art Society, was a group formed in London in 1919 by director Theodore Komisarjevsky, tenor Vladimir Rosing, and dancer Laurent Novikoff. The purpose of the organization was to “bring closer friendship and understanding” between England and Russia “by means of art and its beauty of expression.” LAHDA also hoped to create needed work for the many talented but struggling Russian artists and performers who had been arriving in London as stateless refugees since the Russian Revolution.
As the London Observer explained, LAHDA is "a ‘portmanteau’ word, which combines the meanings of harmony, beauty, and sound; and its object is to bring Russian harmony, beauty, and sound to our doors, so that, whatever the welter of politics, we may get a glimpse into the soul of Russia by communication with the ideas of a people which live on and for ideas.”
Members
The members of LAHDA represented a distinguished cross-section of modern Russian artistic culture. Komisarjevsky had been directing plays at his own theater in Moscow. Novikoff had trained at the Bolshoi Ballet School and had been a dancer with companies belonging to Sergei Diaghilev and Anna Pavlova. Rosing was a well-known recording artist and recitalist of Russian art songs. Other participants included Diaghilev dancers Tamara Karsavina and Lydia Sokolova. LAHDA's governing Art Council included the Russian-born English conductor Albert Coates and the mystical Russian artist Nicholas Roerich.In addition to performing, the members of the group offered training to young artists wishing to study in the modern methods of Russian artistic expression. In discussing the formation of LAHDA, the Manchester Guardian wrote, “Russian art has much to give us, not only of chiefly because it expresses in unique and passionate form the character of a great nation, but still more because it has in it the quality of the universal. The Russians love art because it is art. They care so passionately for its form because they know how to value its soul.”