ukraineartunderattack
Since Russia started its war against Ukraine on February 24, 2022, numerous cultural sites across Ukraine have sustained varying degrees of damage. As of February 7, 2024, UNESCO has verified damage to 342 sites, highlighting the war's ongoing impact on the country's cultural heritage. Among them are 127 religious sites, 150 buildings of historical and artistic interest, 31 museums, 19 monuments, 14 libraries, and 1 archive. Photographic records play an important part in capturing the impact of the war on the country's rich cultural heritage and helping to imagine the scale of what is lost. Vi...
Euronews (English)
When war broke out in Ukraine after Russia’s full-scale invasion on 24 February 2022, museums across the country were faced with the challenge of saving priceless artworks from potential collateral damage. Most cultural institutions smuggled the artworks and artefacts out of the country, where they were stored in containers or bunkers to protect them from Russian bombs. Twelve paintings that were salvaged this way from the Odesa Museum of Western and Eastern Art have now left their bunker and been dusted off for a new exhibition at Berlin’s Gemäldegalerie Museum, marking the second anniversary...
Euronews (English)
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