Lesia Pik
May 7, 2023
Some of us have a Soviet carpet, and some of us have a Soviet past that they can't let go of. There is no need to say that we all come from there. We can't choose our place of birth, but we can choose our future. There is no need to cherish and wrap yourself in the Soviet past - imagining yourself a Roman knight in a toga! Because in reality, this is old rags that should be left in the past....... This also applies to music/movies/etc.
Artist
Lesia is an artist from Odesa, Ukraine. She started drawing 8 years ago after a bad leg injury put her previous career on hold. After leaving Odesa in April 2022, Lesia continues to paint and visualize Ukraine and the invasion. “Drawing for me is a hobby, a job, and a way to reflect. Every time another terrible event happens, I think to myself — again? How can this get any worse? And then I sit down and draw and cry... This is my way of surviving this grief because no one can be aloof. I believe in our Armed Forces, and our victory!”
Lesia Pik
|
May 7, 2023
Ihor Happy Supermongoose
May 2, 2023
Image of a child's body covered with the remains of a blanket after one of the explosions in Kyiv. Image from memory
Ihor Happy Supermongoose
|
May 2, 2023
Jullia Lyshanets
April 30, 2023
This is our cultural heritage as well as language, art, and literature. Study ancient regional recipes, restore family recipes, get acquainted with Ukrainian traditional dishes, share them with your foreign friends, because the taste of Ukrainian cuisine is a symbolic code of our culture. Emphasize that Ukraine exists because we are strong people, with a beautiful language, culinary traditions and culture. Ukraine is delicious!
Jullia Lyshanets
|
April 30, 2023
Julia Zinchenko
April 29, 2023
Artist
Yulia Zinchenko is an illustrator from Kyiv. She draws both digitally and traditionally. When the full-scale war began, she started to paint on the subject of the war in Ukraine in order to convey the events and feelings to the world, and to keep Ukraine’s struggle at the forefront of world news. In the past, she loved to draw her dog the most. She would like to work on illustrations for books and is always open to interesting projects.
Julia Zinchenko
|
April 29, 2023
Mariia Tikhonova
April 28, 2023
Artist
Mariia Tikhonova is an artist born in Mykolaiv, living and working in Kharkiv, Ukraine. Today Mariia creates illustrations to visualize thoughts on the war in Ukraine. But she wants to illustrate children's books and kids magazines. Since the full-scale war started, Mariia began actively creating war diaries in the book “The history of Ukraine” in collage, cutout technique.
Mariia Tikhonova
|
April 28, 2023
Lesia Pik
April 28, 2023
28.04.2023 Умань. Дніпро. Росіяни знов вбили мирних людей і дітей! Відчуваю біль і смуток разом з усією Україною. P. S. Сьогодні лежала в ліжку під час повітряної тривоги і думала - куди прилетить? Потім подумала -якщо в мій будинок - то краще, одразу померти.
Artist
Lesia is an artist from Odesa, Ukraine. She started drawing 8 years ago after a bad leg injury put her previous career on hold. After leaving Odesa in April 2022, Lesia continues to paint and visualize Ukraine and the invasion. “Drawing for me is a hobby, a job, and a way to reflect. Every time another terrible event happens, I think to myself — again? How can this get any worse? And then I sit down and draw and cry... This is my way of surviving this grief because no one can be aloof. I believe in our Armed Forces, and our victory!”
Lesia Pik
|
April 28, 2023
Alisa Mezhenska
April 27, 2023
Ukrainian defender liberated from Russian captivity and holding an apple for first time in a year
Alisa Mezhenska
|
April 27, 2023
Lesia Pik
April 24, 2023
Despite the war, spring is coming. In the process of work, I decided to leave this "condensate" effect of weeping windows. I wanted to depict the heavy rains of recent days. And the fact that we watch the war through our smartphones, in warm apartments...
Artist
Lesia is an artist from Odesa, Ukraine. She started drawing 8 years ago after a bad leg injury put her previous career on hold. After leaving Odesa in April 2022, Lesia continues to paint and visualize Ukraine and the invasion. “Drawing for me is a hobby, a job, and a way to reflect. Every time another terrible event happens, I think to myself — again? How can this get any worse? And then I sit down and draw and cry... This is my way of surviving this grief because no one can be aloof. I believe in our Armed Forces, and our victory!”
Lesia Pik
|
April 24, 2023
Lesia Pik
April 14, 2023
"The sounds of explosions, the feeling of explosions" is the title of my new work. So I understand that I am not in hot spots, but only in Odesa. The war continues. But I wanted to show the feeling when during an air raid - you sit in the bath and hear explosions. You don't know when they will stop, or maybe the next one will be yours.... this is how I feel fear - when it cuts through your body in waves
Artist
Lesia is an artist from Odesa, Ukraine. She started drawing 8 years ago after a bad leg injury put her previous career on hold. After leaving Odesa in April 2022, Lesia continues to paint and visualize Ukraine and the invasion. “Drawing for me is a hobby, a job, and a way to reflect. Every time another terrible event happens, I think to myself — again? How can this get any worse? And then I sit down and draw and cry... This is my way of surviving this grief because no one can be aloof. I believe in our Armed Forces, and our victory!”
Lesia Pik
|
April 14, 2023
Julia Zinchenko
April 13, 2023
Collective trauma now affects many in Ukraine. Although the feelings have dulled, the trauma exists and not from war alone, but also from certain people like pseudo "psychologists". When the psyche is not stable in many during this time, such people can easily enter the media space and manipulate.
Artist
Yulia Zinchenko is an illustrator from Kyiv. She draws both digitally and traditionally. When the full-scale war began, she started to paint on the subject of the war in Ukraine in order to convey the events and feelings to the world, and to keep Ukraine’s struggle at the forefront of world news. In the past, she loved to draw her dog the most. She would like to work on illustrations for books and is always open to interesting projects.
Julia Zinchenko
|
April 13, 2023
Lesia Pik
April 2, 2023
Думаю так повинна виглядати ємблема/символ УПЦ МП I think this is how the emblem or symbol of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the Moscow Patriarchate should look.
Artist
Lesia is an artist from Odesa, Ukraine. She started drawing 8 years ago after a bad leg injury put her previous career on hold. After leaving Odesa in April 2022, Lesia continues to paint and visualize Ukraine and the invasion. “Drawing for me is a hobby, a job, and a way to reflect. Every time another terrible event happens, I think to myself — again? How can this get any worse? And then I sit down and draw and cry... This is my way of surviving this grief because no one can be aloof. I believe in our Armed Forces, and our victory!”
Lesia Pik
|
April 2, 2023
Jullia Lyshanets
|
April 1, 2023
Lesia Pik
March 17, 2023
In memory of the Mariupol Drama Theater. On March 16, 2022 russia bombed a theater where adults and children were hiding. The exact number of victims is still unknown, and the dead are more than 300
Artist
Lesia is an artist from Odesa, Ukraine. She started drawing 8 years ago after a bad leg injury put her previous career on hold. After leaving Odesa in April 2022, Lesia continues to paint and visualize Ukraine and the invasion. “Drawing for me is a hobby, a job, and a way to reflect. Every time another terrible event happens, I think to myself — again? How can this get any worse? And then I sit down and draw and cry... This is my way of surviving this grief because no one can be aloof. I believe in our Armed Forces, and our victory!”
Lesia Pik
|
March 17, 2023
Ihor Happy Supermongoose
March 13, 2023
Ihor Happy Supermongoose
|
March 13, 2023
Mari Seroshtanova
March 11, 2023
People who go to war did not choose this life, but they are forced to live it and take responsibility for the defense of their country. Everyone has their own profession, but now it is the same for everyone - a citizen of Ukraine 🇺🇦
Mari Seroshtanova
|
March 11, 2023
Julia Zinchenko
March 9, 2023
The more moskovia tries to destroy our cities, the more we want to delve into our culture and traditions and share them. Leaving her plan unfulfilled. Happy Birthday Taras Hryhorovych!
Artist
Yulia Zinchenko is an illustrator from Kyiv. She draws both digitally and traditionally. When the full-scale war began, she started to paint on the subject of the war in Ukraine in order to convey the events and feelings to the world, and to keep Ukraine’s struggle at the forefront of world news. In the past, she loved to draw her dog the most. She would like to work on illustrations for books and is always open to interesting projects.
Julia Zinchenko
|
March 9, 2023
Ihor Happy Supermongoose
|
March 9, 2023
Ihor Happy Supermongoose
|
March 8, 2023
Nina Teafornina
March 7, 2023
“Glory to Ukraine” A Ukrainian POW was killed for two words that simply meant he loved his homeland
Nina Teafornina
|
March 7, 2023
Lesia Pik
March 6, 2023
A video emerged today showing a Ukrainian prisoner of war getting executed by russian soldiers. His last words were “Слава Україні!” — “Glory To Ukraine!”
Artist
Lesia is an artist from Odesa, Ukraine. She started drawing 8 years ago after a bad leg injury put her previous career on hold. After leaving Odesa in April 2022, Lesia continues to paint and visualize Ukraine and the invasion. “Drawing for me is a hobby, a job, and a way to reflect. Every time another terrible event happens, I think to myself — again? How can this get any worse? And then I sit down and draw and cry... This is my way of surviving this grief because no one can be aloof. I believe in our Armed Forces, and our victory!”
Lesia Pik
|
March 6, 2023
Lesia Pik
March 6, 2023
Artist
Lesia is an artist from Odesa, Ukraine. She started drawing 8 years ago after a bad leg injury put her previous career on hold. After leaving Odesa in April 2022, Lesia continues to paint and visualize Ukraine and the invasion. “Drawing for me is a hobby, a job, and a way to reflect. Every time another terrible event happens, I think to myself — again? How can this get any worse? And then I sit down and draw and cry... This is my way of surviving this grief because no one can be aloof. I believe in our Armed Forces, and our victory!”
Lesia Pik
|
March 6, 2023