Berliner Boersenzeitung - Poland shows colourful Ukraine art of hope and resistance

EUR -
AED 3.849071
AFN 71.56307
ALL 98.465648
AMD 409.468215
ANG 1.893231
AOA 955.718831
ARS 1054.749619
AUD 1.614472
AWG 1.886288
AZN 1.782519
BAM 1.960492
BBD 2.120976
BDT 125.530419
BGN 1.955562
BHD 0.394986
BIF 3103.196944
BMD 1.047938
BND 1.415574
BOB 7.285435
BRL 6.079039
BSD 1.050514
BTN 88.559806
BWP 14.350343
BYN 3.437727
BYR 20539.583235
BZD 2.117468
CAD 1.478023
CDF 3007.581455
CHF 0.929259
CLF 0.037074
CLP 1022.998268
CNY 7.586809
CNH 7.612525
COP 4594.945795
CRC 535.319825
CUC 1.047938
CUP 27.770355
CVE 110.527404
CZK 25.320383
DJF 187.057666
DKK 7.458693
DOP 63.30425
DZD 140.071563
EGP 51.976684
ERN 15.719069
ETB 130.985724
FJD 2.385055
FKP 0.827155
GBP 0.834903
GEL 2.860704
GGP 0.827155
GHS 16.544594
GIP 0.827155
GMD 74.40381
GNF 9052.578203
GTQ 8.111179
GYD 219.775967
HKD 8.155697
HNL 26.545275
HRK 7.475213
HTG 137.878655
HUF 410.760113
IDR 16678.246381
ILS 3.821337
IMP 0.827155
INR 88.337079
IQD 1376.09326
IRR 44105.092296
ISK 145.129213
JEP 0.827155
JMD 166.717396
JOD 0.743407
JPY 161.017234
KES 135.70087
KGS 90.949906
KHR 4216.049598
KMF 491.430873
KPW 943.143731
KRW 1465.744813
KWD 0.322524
KYD 0.875395
KZT 524.545339
LAK 23070.211523
LBP 94069.025555
LKR 305.681556
LRD 189.077086
LSL 18.992854
LTL 3.094288
LVL 0.633887
LYD 5.141304
MAD 10.554058
MDL 19.202956
MGA 4908.747592
MKD 61.56337
MMK 3403.661487
MNT 3560.892996
MOP 8.418247
MRU 41.772186
MUR 49.588583
MVR 16.191014
MWK 1821.559347
MXN 21.56301
MYR 4.679056
MZN 66.935227
NAD 18.992854
NGN 1763.815703
NIO 38.652133
NOK 11.634516
NPR 141.698761
NZD 1.793324
OMR 0.403444
PAB 1.050514
PEN 3.978622
PGK 4.231643
PHP 61.81779
PKR 291.766354
PLN 4.315041
PYG 8184.587316
QAR 3.832098
RON 4.978336
RSD 117.014826
RUB 108.987644
RWF 1434.318918
SAR 3.935285
SBD 8.792818
SCR 14.272552
SDG 630.332048
SEK 11.536377
SGD 1.412348
SHP 0.827155
SLE 23.785419
SLL 21974.73918
SOS 600.330981
SRD 37.195469
STD 21690.199169
SVC 9.191998
SYP 2632.975314
SZL 18.987441
THB 36.352603
TJS 11.197577
TMT 3.678262
TND 3.331979
TOP 2.45438
TRY 36.278175
TTD 7.135076
TWD 34.036696
TZS 2777.035195
UAH 43.594831
UGX 3892.31507
USD 1.047938
UYU 44.775876
UZS 13476.251302
VES 48.817455
VND 26630.722396
VUV 124.413296
WST 2.925414
XAF 657.52431
XAG 0.034524
XAU 0.000399
XCD 2.832105
XDR 0.803523
XOF 657.530599
XPF 119.331742
YER 261.905872
ZAR 18.978345
ZMK 9432.70014
ZMW 28.966322
ZWL 337.435583
  • RBGPF

    0.8100

    61

    +1.33%

  • RYCEF

    0.0200

    6.79

    +0.29%

  • RELX

    -0.1800

    46.57

    -0.39%

  • SCS

    0.4500

    13.72

    +3.28%

  • NGG

    0.1500

    63.26

    +0.24%

  • BTI

    -0.0500

    37.33

    -0.13%

  • VOD

    0.1800

    8.91

    +2.02%

  • CMSC

    0.0578

    24.73

    +0.23%

  • GSK

    0.1900

    34.15

    +0.56%

  • RIO

    0.6300

    62.98

    +1%

  • BCC

    8.7200

    152.5

    +5.72%

  • AZN

    0.7700

    66.4

    +1.16%

  • CMSD

    0.1200

    24.58

    +0.49%

  • JRI

    0.1600

    13.37

    +1.2%

  • BCE

    0.2500

    27.02

    +0.93%

  • BP

    -0.4000

    29.32

    -1.36%

Poland shows colourful Ukraine art of hope and resistance
Poland shows colourful Ukraine art of hope and resistance / Photo: Wojtek Radwanski - AFP

Poland shows colourful Ukraine art of hope and resistance

Days after invading Ukraine, Russian forces fired rockets at a museum housing colourful paintings by the late Ukrainian folk artist Maria Prymachenko, admired by Pablo Picasso and Marc Chagall. The building burned down but her joyful work survived.

Text size:

Residents of the northern town of Ivankiv managed to rescue the pictures, turning the imaginative painter into a symbol of endurance and hope.

Prymachenko's light through darkness approach despite a lifetime of hardships can be appreciated starting Friday in Poland's capital, now home to thousands of refugees from neighbouring Ukraine.

The exhibition features dozens of gouache paintings of rural life and fantastical creatures in a childlike style and a palette resplendent with flamboyant tones of highlighter pink, sunflower yellow and blood orange.

"Beyond being a famous painter, Maria Prymachenko is also a great symbol of Russia's failure to erase Ukrainian identity and culture," said Vitalii Bilyi, counsellor at the Ukrainian embassy in Warsaw.

"And thanks to this exhibition we can spread the word," he told AFP at a press preview of the show entitled "A tiger came into the garden", which runs until June at the Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw.

- 'Bouquet to the Unknown Soldier' -

Prymachenko was born in the village of Bolotnya in 1909 and over nearly nine decades survived polio, the Ukrainian famine, both world wars -- losing her husband to the second -- and the Chernobyl nuclear disaster.

"She showed strength of spirit and painted all her life. The paintings, while colourful, show different aspects of life and the Ukrainian tragedy," said Myroslava Keryk, head of the Ukrainian House Foundation which promotes the country's culture in Poland.

"And they provide hope of victory, that we will persevere and the war will end," she told AFP.

Prymachenko produced her commentary on everyday life by pairing images of animals or nature with little poems, often with grammatical mistakes because of her lack of education, Keryk said.

An example from the exhibition is a meditation on hunger featuring a cheery yellow and pink depiction of a billy goat and the title "Dear little goat, have you eaten, have you drunk?"

Another shows bright pink ornamental tulips against a sombre background with a caption that begins: "A bouquet to the Unknown Soldier. Honour and glory to you, dear warriors!"

- 'Live like flowers bloom' -

The war widow painted a whole series dedicated to fighting men, which several decades later "has an incredible topical anti-war message", said co-curator Szymon Maliborski.

"These are works that allow Prymachenko to, on the one hand, avoid having to directly depict war, but on the other hand show a grappling with loss, the death of a loved one," he told AFP.

A sunny painting of exotic blue birds is offset by the poem, "Four parrots sit in a cherry tree humming. The boys go to the army and the girls see them off -- wishing them luck".

This contrast between optimism and trauma was typical for the painter who had wished for "people to live like flowers bloom", according to Maliborski.

She often "mixed the solemn with the comical, adding a dash of humour or acceptance to her criticism," he said.

"There's a kind of coming to terms with the world and wanting to change it simultaneously. The awareness that human nature is what it is yet fighting for it to be better."

(F.Schuster--BBZ)