UCLA/Getty Program’s Next Distinguished Speaker Series feat. Dr. Ihor Poshyvailo: Identity War in Ukraine: The Power of Cultural Resistance Friday April 7th @ 11AM

Dr. Poshyvailo with a ceramic rooster rescued from the air bombed block of flats in the town of Borodianka that came to be a symbol of Ukrainian resilience. April 2022, Borodianka, Kyiv Region. Credit: Bohdan Poshyvailo, Maidan Museum.

UCLA/Getty Program’s Distinguished Speaker Series
featuring:

Ihor Poshyvailo
Director, National Memorial to the Heavenly Hundred Heroes
and Revolution of Dignity Museum (Maidan Museum)

Friday, April 7, 2023
11:00 a.m. PST
Live streaming via Zoom

Click Here to RSVP

Please submit your questions in advance of the webinar via email to:
hnadworny@support.ucla.edu
 by Wednesday, April 5 at 12:00 p.m.

Instructions to join the webinar will be provided once your registration
has been confirmed.

About the program: The lecture will focus on the full-scale attack of Russia on Ukrainian heritage and on the cultural resistance in times of war. More information available here.

 

 

About the speaker: Ihor Poshyvailo (Kyiv, Ukraine) ) is a general director of the National Memorial to the Heavenly Hundred Heroes and Revolution of Dignity Museum (Maidan Museum). He is a cultural activist, ethnologist, museologist, cultural manager and art curator.  Dr. Poshyvailo is former chairman of the Museum Council at the Ukrainian Ministry of Culture, a former Vice-Chair of the ICOM DRMC International Committee on Disaster Resilient Museums. He holds a PhD in History, and was a Fulbright Scholar at the Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage and an international fellow at the DeVos Institute of Arts Management at the Kennedy Center.

Description: Almost a year ago Russian troops launched a massive missile attack on all sovereign territory of Ukraine and brutally crossed its border in tanks. Thus, how a full-scale Russian-Ukrainian war started.

Museums, libraries, archives and other cultural institutions responded to the threat in accordance with their capacities and military situation. The civilized world launched a “cultural lend-lease” for Ukraine, providing cultural institutions with packing and restoration materials, protective and emergency equipment, hard and cloud storages, humanitarian and financial assistance. Ukrainian museums, libraries, archives, scientific and art centers, getting such solidarity and help, began active rescue operations, assessing losses and risks, documenting crimes against culture.

In a period of 11 months of the war, the Russians destroyed or damaged 1,189 cultural objects in Ukraine, according to records from the Ministry of Culture and Information Policy of Ukraine. Tens of thousands of artefacts were stolen from museum and private collections in the occupied regions. The looting of Ukrainian historical, cultural and artistic values, the purposeful destruction of museums, archives, libraries, theatres, cultural centers, monuments, and religious buildings is an intentionally planned military and ideological operation of the Kremlin regime.

What should be done for complex processes of stabilization, early recovery and reconstruction of Ukrainian culture, an international tribunal against Russian military criminals, restitution of cultural values and promotion of Ukrainian culture worldwide? As well as for raising awareness of the experience of this war and measures to strengthen the stability of culture in times of crisis? These are the issues to discuss in the lecture.

Ihor Poshyvailo Invitation