The language in Russia is called Russian, which this word is also used to tell someone that they are Russian. They also speak in other languages, yet when they speak in English it turns out like they're not even speaking English. The other languages in Russia are Tartar, Ukrainian, Chuvash, Bashir, Mordvin, and Chechen. The religions are Russian Orthodox, Muslim, and others.
The art in Russia was inherited by Russians from Byzantium. When it began as an offshoot of the mosaic and fresco tradition of early Byzantine churches. The 8th and 9th centuries, the iconoclasm controversy in the Orthodox church called into question whether religious images were a legitimate practice or sacrilegious idolatry. The use of images wasn't banned, yet it did prompt a thorough appreciation of the difference between art intended to depict reality and art designed for spiritual contemplation. That difference is one of the reasons that the artistic style of icons can seem so invariant. Certain kinds of balance and harmony became established as reflections of divinity, and as such they invited careful reproduction and subtle refinement rather than striking novelty. During the 14th century in particular, icon painting in Russia took on a much greater degree of subjectivity and personal expression, the most notable figure in this change was Andrey Rublyov, whose work can be viewed in both the Tretyakov Gallery in Moscow and the Russian Museum in St. Petersburg.
This is what Russian music sounds like this.