Early activism and Voina (2007–2011) Tolokonnikova and
Pyotr Verzilov joined the
Voina art collective in 2007 and participated in several of their provocative art performances. In February 2008, they were involved in the "
Fuck for the heir Puppy Bear!" performance in which couples were filmed engaging in sexual acts in the Timiryazev State Biology Museum in Moscow. The performance was said to be intended as a kind of
satire of then President
Dmitry Medvedev's call for increased reproduction. She was in the late stages of
pregnancy at the time. On March 3, 2008, she was detained by police at a dissenters march in Moscow. Tolokonnikova was among the Voina members who
disrupted a trial for the director of the Andrei Sakharov Center in 2009. But later, according to the "
Rossiyskaya Gazeta", together with Pyotr Verzilov were expelled from Voina "for provocation and surrender of activists of the group to the police". She also took part in a series of actions
Operation Kiss Garbage, (, roughly translated as "Kiss a pig") from January through March 2011. This project comprised female members' kissing policewomen in Moscow metro stations and on the streets.
Pussy Riot (2011–present) Formation and early actions Tolokonnikova created Pussy Riot in 2011. As described by journalist
Masha Gessen, the group began as "a fictional band, invented for the finale of a slide-show presentation" at a September 2011 conference for opposition groups. Tolokonnikova had recently immersed herself in feminist and queer theory and decided to use her opportunity to speak at the conference to "compensate for Russia's lack of a feminist movement, a body of social theory, or a Riot Grrrl legacy." She ended her presentation by playing a noisy recording she had made with ex-Voina comrade
Yekaterina Samutsevich: shouted lyrics over a backing track, which became Pussy Riot's first song "Kill the Sexist." As Gessen has written, "Pussy Riot is not a band. Pussy Riot is a precise weapon, aimed directly at Putin." The group emerged from the Russian activist and art scene, with Tolokonnikova bringing her experience from
Voina to the new collective. Pussy Riot's early actions focused on provocative political performances in public spaces, using punk music and performance art to critique the Russian government and its relationship with the
Russian Orthodox Church.
Punk Prayer - Cathedral of Christ the Savior performance (2012) On February 21, 2012, Tolokonnikova and other members of Pussy Riot entered the Cathedral of Christ the Savior, and danced on the altar, asking Mother Mary to become a feminist, and to rid
Russia of Putin. A criminal case was opened on February 26 against Tolokonnikova and two other members who had participated. The "Punk Prayer" action was called one of the greatest works of art of the 21st Century by the Guardian.
Arrest, trial, and imprisonment On March 3, Tolokonnikova and Pussy Riot co-member
Maria Alyokhina were identified by the Russian authorities. They were arrested on March 4 after being accused of
hooliganism. They first denied being members of the group and started a
hunger strike in protest against being held in jail away from their young children. They were held without bail and were formally charged on June 4 with the indictment running to 2,800 pages. While there was speculation that Canadian authorities might attempt to intervene because Tolokonnikova is a Canadian permanent resident, such intervention did not occur. Tolokonnikova was serving her two-year sentence in the
IK-14 women's
penal colony near the settlement of Partsa (),
Republic of
Mordovia. On September 23, 2013, she went on hunger strike over prison conditions as well as alleged threats against her life made by prison staff. Her letter about the conditions of the women in the penal colony asserted that the women have no rights, that the prisoners must work 16–17 hours and sleep 3–4 hours a day, and that they have a day off every 8th week. Further, she claimed that when prisoners complain they are punished, and that when they complain about the treatment of other prisoners they are punished even more severely. Claiming that collective punishment is frequent, she also stated that the prisoners are sometimes beaten with a particular focus on hitting the kidneys. Another asserted punishment consists of keeping a prisoner outdoors in the cold without sufficient clothing. Most of what she reported has been affirmed by other sources. While imprisoned, she exchanged letters with filmmaker, philosopher, and cultural critic
Slavoj Žižek discussing democracy and her activism. Their correspondence was arranged by the French philosopher
Michel Eltchaninoff, and their 11 letters were compiled into a short book,
Comradely Greetings: The Prison Letters of Nadya and Slavoj, published by
Verso Books in 2014. In late September 2013, Tolokonnikova was hospitalised after going without food for a week. She was treated in the prison's medical ward; authorities did not release more specific details. On October 21, 2013, she was transferred to another prison; her whereabouts remained unknown for several weeks. On November 5, 2013, it was reported that Tolokonnikova had been transferred to IK-50, a prison located near
Nizhny Ingash, approximately 300 kilometres from
Krasnoyarsk,
Siberia. On November 15, she was again able to communicate with her husband through a video call from the prison hospital.
Release and later global activism On the afternoon of December 23, 2013, Tolokonnikova was released from a prison hospital in
Krasnoyarsk, where she was being treated for an unspecified illness. According to Yelena Pimonenko, senior prosecutor assistant of the
Krasnoyarsk Krai, Tolokonnikova was released because the article "hooliganism" of the Russian Criminal Code fell under the newly introduced
amnesty bill. as Russia prepared to host the
2014 Winter Olympics in February. About her release, Tolokonnikova said: "Releasing people just a few months before their term expires is a cosmetic measure ... that includes the case of
Khodorkovsky, who didn't have much time left on his prison term. This is ridiculous. While Putin refuses to release those people who really needed it. It is a disgusting and cynical act", and urged countries to boycott the 2014 Winter Olympics. She and Alyokhina said they would form a human rights movement for prison reforms. After their release, Tolokonnikova and Alyokhina founded a penal and judicial-themed media outlet
MediaZona. In February 2014, Tolokonnikova and
Maria Alyokhina were detained in
Sochi by the Adler Police in connection with an alleged hotel theft. They were released without charge. On February 19, footage surfaced showing Tolokonnikova and the other Pussy Riot members being attacked with
nagaikas by
Cossacks, who were helping in patrolling Sochi during the Winter Olympics. and
Antony Blinken of the
State Department In 2022, Tolokonnikova met with Secretary of State
Antony Blinken to discuss freedom of press worldwide, and in particular the future of independent media in Russia, such as
Mediazona.
Maria Zakharova, Spokeswoman for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation, reacted to this meeting on her official Telegram channel.
Ongoing Criminal Cases (2023-present) In late March 2023, the Russian Interior Ministry put Tolokonnikova on their wanted list and opened an investigation against her for allegedly having insulted religious feelings of believers. On November 21, 2023, her arrest was ordered
in absentia by a Moscow court. ==Visual and performance art==