until 15.09 “Day by Day”
An exhibition by Ukrainian artists and students of the Ukrainian Academy of Printing. These works are reflections on the Russian invasion of Ukraine, reflected in graphics, painting and sculpture. In total, there are about 45 works. About 30 Ukrainian professional artists were invited to participate in the exhibition (those living in different parts of Ukraine and in exile), including Serhiy Khrapov, Oleh Dergachov, Mykhailo Drymaylo, Oleksandr Mykytenko and Yelyzaveta Yezhkova. Students also joined the exhibition in Lviv. In particular, students of the Department of Book and Easel Graphics of the Ukrainian Academy of Printing. The exhibition includes works created between 24 February 2022 and 31 January 2023. The exhibition has already been presented in various galleries in Germany, including Berlin, Padborn, and Nuremberg. In total, 6 international exhibitions have already been held to collect donations for the Armed Forces of Ukraine. This exhibition aims to make visible and tangible the situation of Ukrainian artists living in Ukraine or in exile during the war. And to give them a space to express their problems, needs, difficulties and hopes.
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until 19.09 “Andriy Antoniuk. God’s Field”
The exhibition includes about 50 works of art from the private collections of Petro Bahrii and Mykhailo Kuchirka, which include many works from Andrii Antoniuk’s oeuvre. The exhibition is dominated by paintings created by the author in the late 1980s and 1990s. Despite the fact that the artist died in 2013, his philosophical and poetic views, creativity and deep meaning live on in each of his works. This exhibition is intended to show the artist’s worldview, his sacredness in painting and invite each visitor to a journey into the depths of his own soul. Many of the artist’s works were inspired by his native place, namely the historical part of the small provincial town of Pervomaisk – Bohopil (Mykolaiv region), where he was born and which he fondly called the Field of God. The exhibition is named after this special place of his childhood.
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until 15.09 “Clay carpet – art schools”
Clay patterned textiles and, in particular, carpet weaving is an outstanding artistic and cultural phenomenon of Europe in the late nineteenth and early twenty-first centuries, which art historians in the early twentieth century called “carpet frenzy”. Clay patterned textiles are a wide range of handmade artistic fabrics. Particularly popular were and still are hand-woven plain-woven carpets. The exhibition “Hlyniany Carpet – Art Schools” is composed of exhibits from the Historical and Local Lore Museum, the Department of Weaving and Carpet Weaving in Hlyniany, the collection of carpets from the ZENA-Hlyniany-ART STUDIO School and Workshop, the collections of the Lviv National Academy of Arts, the Kosiv Institute of Decorative and Applied Arts, the Lviv State College of Applied Arts named after Ivan Trush, and the works of artists participating in the International Ethnic Project “Ecological Perspective”. Ivan Trush Lviv State College of Applied Arts, as well as works by artists participating in the International Ethno-Art Project “Ecological Perspective”.
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