Travelling to the largest landlocked country in the world promises diverse landscapes and incredible vistas. It is also a great place to visit for those more comfortable with city delights.
Cities
Almaty
is Kazakhstan’s largest city and its main transport hub and centre of industry and education. It served as capital of the former Kazakh Soviet Socialist Republic (1929–91) and of independent Kazakhstan (1991–97) before the capital was moved to Astana (now Nur-Sultan). Almaty means “Father of Apples” due to the abundance of apple trees in the region.
The Golden Warrior Monument,
symbolising Kazakhstan’s independence, is in Almaty’s Independence Square (also called Republic Square). The Golden Warrior and a barys (winged snow leopard) sit on top of 28-metre pillar. Almaty also has the Kazakhstan Museum of Arts housing Kazakh, Russian, and Western European art, and the Kazakh Museum of Folk Musical Instruments showcasing traditional musical instruments from Kazakh culture, as well as instruments of Turkish, Uzbek, and Kyrgyz origins. A traditional Kazakh instrument is the plucked long-necked dombra. The art of playing the two-stringed dombra is inscribed on the Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.
Nur-Sultan
was originally founded as a Russian military outpost. It was named Aqmola (“White Grave”) following Kazakhstan’s independence in 1992. Five years later, the country’s capital was moved from Almaty to Aqmola, which was renamed Astana in 1998. Astana simply means “capital”. On March 23, 2019, its capital Astana was formally renamed to Nur-Sultan to honour its longtime leader Nursultan Nazarbayev, who has resigned that month.
Nur-Sultan has the National Museum of the Republic of Kazakhstan, housed inside an eye-catching building of blue glass and white marble. It is the biggest museum in Central Asia. Travellers can view the Bayterek Tower, which stands 97 metres tall to commemorate the year 1997, which was when the capital of the country was moved from Almaty. The tower is topped by a golden egg symbolising new life, and which also serves as an observation deck offering a view of the city.
Soviet Art in Almaty
Kazakhstan’s move to a new, planned city in 1997 may have saved the Soviet-era art in Almaty from destruction. The first Soviet mosaics adorned public spaces in Moscow beginning in the 1930s. It fell out of fashion under Nikita Khrushchev, who condemned the previous regime’s excessive restrictions imposed on artists (some of whom were sent to camps or killed). However, the aesthetic reappeared as large-scale “monumental art” in the 1960s and 1970s. “Monumentalists” from Russia were sent to Kazakhstan to train local artists during this time.
In the period from 1965 to 1985, Almaty’s buildings were widely decorated with these Kazakhstan-made Soviet monumental artworks. These art forms were collectively known as monumental’noe iskusstvo or “monumental art”. Our article “Soviet Art in Kazakhstan” details the history and discovery of these rare art pieces and the efforts local volunteers are doing to preserve them.
Natural Attractions
The Kolsai Lake System is made up of Kazakhstan’s most beautiful water formations, sitting in the midst of mountain ridges and fir trees. The lakes are so crystal-clear that they reflect their surroundings like a mirror.
A unique attraction is Lake Kaindy, sitting at an altitude of 2,000 metres, about 40 kilometres from the Kolsai Lakes. The lake was formed after an earthquake in 1911, the limestone landslide forming a natural dam, the water submerging a forest of spruce trees. The tree trunks poke out of the surface of the water, a dreamlike, otherworldly sight.
Another natural attraction is the 4,600-kilometre Altyn-Emel National Park. Created in 1996, it is Kazakhstan’s largest natural reserve, comparable to four times the size of Hong Kong. The park is home to the Terekty Petroglyphs, which dates back to the Bronze Age, the stone carvings depicting the hunts, rituals, worship, and animals of the ancient nomads, as well as the Besshatyr burial mounds and the vertical Oshaktas, which were either used as a place to put giant cauldrons to feed Genghis Khan’s army, or a signal tower to warn them against enemy forces.
Kazakhstan is dominated by the flat steppe, but 200 kilometres east of Almaty, the Charyn Canyon appears as if out of nowhere. Carved by the wind and the Charyn River (also spelled Sharyn River), the canyon is 150 to 300 metres deep and is often compared to the Grand Canyon.