In amongst the stone statues and manicured lawns of the Museum-Estate Arkhangelskoye, an array of rare vehicles is on display. The annual Autoculture festival includes different categories: classics, motorsport legends, SUVs, and rare youngtimers, ultra-expensive cars, and spectacular sports cars, which are usually hidden in private collections and restoration workshops. One of the more unusual-looking cars is the Morgan Three Wheeler owned by Igor Promovendov. “It was produced from 1909 to 1950, then they stopped production because they switched to cars,” he explains. “But since 2011 they have resumed their production and are producing to this day, but, probably, this year they have already sold out.” The festival brings together rare car collectors and general enthusiasts from across the country. As organizer Filip Fedotov explains, the goal is to build a larger automotive culture in Russia: “In Russia, in the Soviet Union, there has never been a cult of the …