This timeline is created to tell people about Ukraine's heroic resistance against full-scale russian aggression. February 24, 2022 is the day it all began... Strap in
Lesia Pik
June 1, 2023
Russia continues to kill Ukrainian children! Russia is a terrorist state!
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!”
1th
Daria Bakieva
June 1, 2023
“Children’s Day” in Ukraine. Today on “Children’s day”, russia shelled Kyiv, killing a 9-year-old girl
1th
Irada Suleimanova
June 1, 2023
Waking up in the middle of the night to the sound of an air raid siren. Watching from the window how the air defense shoots down a ballistic missile, which is falling somewhere close, slowly fading away. Reading in the news that it fell on a children’s clinic in our district, killing three people, including a mother and her 9-year-old daughter who were trying to reach the shelter. Realising that today is International Children’s Day. Russia is a terrorist state.
Artist
Irada is an artist based in Kyiv, Ukraine. Drawing for her is a way of reflecting on what's happening in the world, her emotions and experiences.
1th
Julia Zinchenko
June 6, 2023
Today, the Kakhovskaya HPP dam was partially destroyed. A zoo was flooded, many animals died and were injured, many people were left without their homes, the current water level reached the rooftops in Nova Kakhovka. As a result of the destruction of the damn, at least 150 tons of machine oil got into the Dnipro, and there is a risk of further leakage of more than 300 tons
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.
6th
Lesia Pik
June 6, 2023
Russia is a terrorist state! The man-made disaster created by them threatens not only people, but also the entire environment. I want to scream! should we be underwater and buried? This is a catastrophe, the consequences of which we cannot yet understand!
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!”
6th
6th
Jullia Lyshanets
June 7, 2023
Homes, cities, people, animals... Ruszia is destroying our everything, everything. ⠀ They destroyed the dams and reservoir of the Kakhovskaya HPP - this is a man-made blow to the environment, after which nature will have to recover for decades! A tragedy for the whole world
7th
Daria Lucyshyna
June 7, 2023
A huge ecological & humanitarian disaster was caused by #russia blowing up #Kakhowka dam in Ukraine. Over 80 towns are flooded. People lose their homes. Animals in the local zoo d¡ed painfully. Natural sites and agricultural resources are destroyed. A nuclear plant is at risk. And more devastating consequences are yet to come because of the russians' eco-terror¡sm
Artist
Daria Lutsyshyna is an artist born in Dnipro, living and working in Kyiv, Ukraine. Daria creates illustrations, posters, and graphic design. During the full-scale Russian invasion, she focused on illustrating war-related texts, news, her own experience of war, and reflections on its nature and consequences. She believes art is not "outside of politics" and artists and their work matter and can make a difference.
7th
Nina Teafornina
June 8, 2023
We all woke up to news of ruzzian occupiers blowing up the Kakhovka Hydroelectric Power Plant. A lot of places are flooded, people and animals are in danger, some are dying right now, while the left bank of Kherson is occupied so we cannot even help our people evacuate from there. The ruzzians are not helping people, instead they are constantly shelling possible evacuation points. The scale of this environmental disaster is similar to Chornobyl. It’s not the first time ruzzians blew up a dam in my country — they did the same in 1941 with Dnieper Hydroelectric Station.
8th
Kate Didyk
June 14, 2023
The amount of grief brought to the beautiful Kherson region by the russian army is immeasurable
14th
Mari Seroshtanova
June 15, 2023
Donate to reinforce our air defense, to sleep well https://novaposhta.ua/zapakuy_nebo/
15th
Lesia Pik
June 23, 2023
"Information bubble" 30*40 cmI wanted to raise some topics that concern me. There will be no conclusions, only questions and my thoughts. We are all in our own information bubble. It is almost impossible to get out of it, but it is possible to expand it. Someone said that social networks unite. Yes, they do. But sometimes I get the feeling that we seem to be shouting, but the world doesn't want to hear us. Like bubbles under water from the blown up Kakhovka hydroelectric power plant. I live in a war, I watch the war online. It worries me, it traumatizes me. But I cannot turn a blind eye to it. Because people who are for everything good and against everything bad do not want to see this reality. Maybe the Russians will blow up the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant, maybe we will be just an information trail.
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!”
23th
Russia still represents a clear and present danger to all democracies and peace-loving countries in the world. It wages war by bombing hospitals, homes and schools.