Artists and arts organizations across Canada are working to launch shows in support of Ukraine while taking public stances against Russia and its devastating invasion on the country launched last week.
Valeriy Kostyuk, a Ukrainian-born producer with Toronto’s Lighthouse Immersive art space, says efforts in two countries are underway to open a North American immersive exhibit featuring the work of Taras Shevchenko, beloved Ukrxjmtzywainian artist, poet and political thinker.
Kostyuk says the original plan was to have the sound and projection exhibit ready for September, but when the Russian army began its advance last week, Shevchenko’s 19th-century work promoting an independent and sovereign Ukraine became urgently relevant.
He said in an interview today he’s working with a team at the National Museum of Taras Shevchenk in Kyiv — mostly at night, when the internet is faster — to get the show ready for March 15 viewings in Toronto, Chicago, Denver, Los Angeles and Boston.
Meanwhile, Russian-born Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra music director Daniel Raiskin posted a scathing indictment of his country’s actions to social media last week.
Raiskin wrote in a Facebook Wednesday he was suspending all immediate and future work in Russia until the country ended its "barbaric" and "fratricidal" assault on Ukraine and justice had been served.
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A volunteer piles up boxes of donations destined to Ukraine at the St. Michael’s Ukrainian Catholic Church in Montreal, Thursday, March 3, 2022. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Paul Chiasson