Russia

From the very first day of the invasion of Ukraine, anti-war art has actually spilled onto the streets and squares of Russian cities.
And, in spite of detentions and fines, for 10 months they have continued to oppose versus Russian militarism.The Moscow Times selected seven of the most engaging anti-war artists and spoke to some of them about their work and their lives.Art group YavArt group Yavs Window onto Europe Art group Yav/ InstagramThe St.
Petersburg experimental art group Yav ( truth ) was established by Anastasia Vladychkina.
The slogan of my life is what does not eliminate me makes me stronger, she stated.
Prior to February, members ofYav painted their murals on walls that lots of people might see, however after the war began they began to paint on deserted buildings or fences-- so there would be less chance of a fine.
One of their most recent works is called A Window onto Europe and was painted in an industrial district.
This popular expression was initially used by Venetian poet Francesco Algarotti while taking a trip in Russia.
Later, poet Alexander Pushkin used it in his poem The Bronze Horseman.
Today St.
Petersburg is still typically called Russias window onto Europe, however in Yavs work the window to the West is boarded up with concrete bricks splattered with blood.KoinKoins Vladimir Solovyov Koin/ InstagramThe confidential underground artist Koin started painting a series of dreadful creatures when opposition leader Alexei Navalny was jailed in 2021.
Ever since, Koin has actually published ravaging pictures of Russias politicians and elites on social networks as monstrous vampires and monsters.
While not strictly speaking a street artist, his work is widely available online, especially on social networks.
Some time ago I stopped painting because I didnt wish to work on this dreadful style any longer, I didnt desire anything to do with filthy politics ...
But after Feb.
24 I started again, and now I just cant stop.
I was depressed and disappointed by the war and what people thought of it.
I was dissatisfied in people.
I do not really understand how to deal with it.
Maybe it sounds selfish, but I make art since it assists me.
I release the hazardous emotions that poison me-- anger, rage, fear, disgust.
I understand that my work helps other individuals with that also, Koin told The Moscow Times.Yelena Osipova St.
Petersburg artist and activist Yelena Osipova on Nevsky Prospekt.Sergei Rybezhsky/ KommersantYelena Osipova has actually been called the conscience of St.
Petersburg.
The 77-year-old pensioner has actually been opposing Putins regime for two decades.
She has actually been fined and apprehended lots of times, she wont stop-- even in wartime.
On the May 1 vacation, she took her latest work onto the citys main street, Nevsky Prospekt.
Her painting had the words worldwide uniformity, no war and 21th century: wars kill mankind on it.
Reporters Yelena Lukyanova and Alexei Dushutin from independent media outlet Novaya Gazeta had actually photographed her and were standing beside her when the cops got here.
The reporters were sent to the police headquarters, the police officers took Osipova home-- and the painting was confiscated.FfchwFfchws Only rain should fall from the sky ffchw.streetart/ InstagramPerm street artist Ffchw creates provocative street art about life in Russia.
But often the justification is hardly provocative at all.
On Dec.
24 he was detained while dealing with a brand-new piece of street art called See you ...
composed in various languages, consisting of Ukrainian.Ffchws favorite piece is called Only rain ought to fall from the sky.
All of my artwork is done from the bottom of my heart, and I do not be sorry for anything, he told The Moscow Times.
After Feb.
24 I needed to try to find a new language for my statements.
My art is divided into prior to and after.
Now it is also accompanied by numerous emotions like guilt and worry over the horrific and devastating events that are occurring.
Im sure that art can alter lives, however will it be able to alter the program? I dont understand.
Vladimir OvchinnikovVladimir Ovchinnikov next to his graffiti in Borovsk.Vladimir Ovchinnikov/ FacebookVladimir Ovchinnikov, 85, is a popular figure in Borovsk, a town of 10,000 people not far from Moscow.Ovchinnikov was fined 35,000 rubles ($475) previously this year for an illustration of a little lady using the colors of the Ukrainian flag with 3 bombs falling onto one of the structures in his town.
Below her image he wrote: STOP.
The mural was painted over, but later Ovchinnikov painted a new piece on the same place -- the word bezumie ( madness ) in Russian with the Latin letter Z-- the Kremlin sign of its unique military operation.
Misha MarkerMisha Markers Goes ***** Misha Marker/ InstagramThe works of among the most popular Russian street artists, Misha Marker, are painted over nearly as quickly as they appear on the streets of St.
Petersburg.
But that doesnt stop him.
Prior to the war, his work was displayed in numerous galleries and museums, including the Russian Museum.
Marker hides his face in public so that nobody understands what he appears like-- or his age.In recent works, he utilizes five snowflake-like asterisks as a replacement for the Russian word for war (the word is forbidden under Russian law and individuals are supposed, instead, to use the expression special military operation.
)ZoomZooms Repka Zoom/ InstagramLike many other Russian street artists, Zoom does not expose his real name or look and speaks with his public through social media and graffiti.
His works previously appeared on the streets of Moscow, now he works mostly in St.
Petersburg.His current painting Turnip is a referral to the popular Russian folk tale The Gigantic Turnip.
In this tale, a grandpa plants a turnip, which grows so large that he can not pull it up himself.
He asks his other half, but even together they cant pull it up.
Then their granddaughter and animals are hired to assist too, till they finally pull the turnip out of the ground.
Zoom painted his version of the tale with a nuclear explosion and skeletons on Ulitsa Khersona, called after the Ukrainian city occupied by Russian forces for 8 months this year.
I initially revealed this work a couple of years earlier at a solo show, but the street version of it is now more relevant than ever.
Individuals see that this is not a joking matter, Zoom told The Moscow Times.
We reside in traumatic however extremely intriguing times.
My individual difficulty is to develop works that join individuals and prevent them from dehumanizing others.
If thats not what art is for, then what is?





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