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Art talk: Roman Khimei and Yarema Malashchuk

Welcome to an art talk with the Ukrainian artists Roman Khimei and Yarema Malashchuk - participating online. Art Initiative is showing their video-work View of the Temporarily Occupied Left Bank of the Kherson Region, 2023, on the big screen in the school´s atrium during September and part of October 2024. The Rana Begum Room on floor 5, Sveavägen 65, on September 24, 12.15-13. THE ROOM IS FULLY BOOKED. You can still join online. Find link below.

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The Ukrainian artists Roman Khimei and Yarema Malashchuk. Their work is also currently being exhibited at the Venice Biennale. 

On February 24, 2022, Russia invaded Ukraine. The invasion gave rise to the largest conflict in Europe since World War II and, as of 2024, Russian troops occupy about 20% of Ukraine. Early in the invasion, Russian forces began a military occupation of Ukraine's Kherson Oblast, a region in southern Ukraine just north of Crimea. The title of the video-work shown on the large screen in the atrium, View of the Temporarily Occupied Left Bank of the Kherson Region, refers to a painting by Fedir Alekseyev called “The View of Kherson”. The painting was looted from Kherson Local Lore Museum in October 2022. 

After Kherson was liberated by Ukranian troops in November 2022, Yarema Malashchuk and Roman Khimei filmed this video from a window of the partly destroyed Honchar Library. The landscape depicts the Dnipro River and greenery in the direction of Oleshky – a town where most of the Russian troops that currently bomb Kherson are stationed. It shows the war’s proximity and presence. 

Kyiv-based artists and filmmakers Roman Khimei and Yarema Malashchuk graduated as cinematographers from the Institute of Screen Arts in Kyiv, Ukraine. Their work engages with imperial mythologies: ideals and stories used to explain, justify, and to a certain extent, qualify, the practice of imperialism. “We started to think about it after the Maidan revolution.* Therefore, our research is mostly based on current socio-political transformations of Ukraine” says the duo. 

Their work has previously been shown at GIBCA Gothenburg Biennial, Kyiv Binennial, and in group shows at Haus der Kunst, Castello di Rivoli, Albertinum and others. Their work is also currently being exhibited at the Venice Biennale. 

The conversation will be moderated by Sona Stepanyan (b. 1987, Armenia), a curator based in Stockholm, currently employed at The Swedish Curators’ Association. Her international curatorial practice has consistently been manifesting and centering artistic practices and context-driven thinking through research, exhibitions, and public programming.

Welcome to the art talk on September 24, 12.15-13. 

THE ROOM IS FULLY BOOKED. You can still join online. Use this link from 12.15 Tuesday September 24. 

* The Maidan Revolution was a series of protests in Ukraine that began in November 2013, sparked by President Viktor Yanukovych's decision to reject a European Union trade agreement in favor of closer ties with Russia. The movement led to Yanukovych's ousting and the formation of a new government. It also heightened tensions with Russia, leading to the annexation of Crimea in 2014, with Russian troops present in eastern Ukraine since 2014, and, eventually, culminating in the ongoing war.” 

Art Initiative