The Prague Post - Ukraine's cultural crucible embraces the art of war

EUR -
AED 4.240099
AFN 79.051894
ALL 97.346961
AMD 442.031996
ANG 2.065984
AOA 1058.561864
ARS 1567.056978
AUD 1.786348
AWG 2.08076
AZN 1.955017
BAM 1.956359
BBD 2.331566
BDT 140.770207
BGN 1.956151
BHD 0.435164
BIF 3442.953545
BMD 1.154375
BND 1.488112
BOB 7.979348
BRL 6.365547
BSD 1.15473
BTN 101.298055
BWP 15.682343
BYN 3.794651
BYR 22625.744326
BZD 2.319593
CAD 1.592627
CDF 3336.142663
CHF 0.934818
CLF 0.028463
CLP 1116.372798
CNY 8.286968
CNH 8.300122
COP 4731.597238
CRC 583.461593
CUC 1.154375
CUP 30.59093
CVE 110.296503
CZK 24.61012
DJF 205.641407
DKK 7.463575
DOP 70.190048
DZD 150.4612
EGP 55.876005
ERN 17.315621
ETB 159.546087
FJD 2.61593
FKP 0.86865
GBP 0.869187
GEL 3.120837
GGP 0.86865
GHS 12.182585
GIP 0.86865
GMD 83.695888
GNF 10015.860713
GTQ 8.85953
GYD 241.602145
HKD 9.061542
HNL 30.35567
HRK 7.539452
HTG 151.533281
HUF 399.274619
IDR 18908.253727
ILS 3.983158
IMP 0.86865
INR 101.329824
IQD 1512.732064
IRR 48628.034195
ISK 142.63389
JEP 0.86865
JMD 184.772774
JOD 0.818437
JPY 170.417992
KES 149.142598
KGS 100.949738
KHR 4627.381793
KMF 493.496062
KPW 1038.964165
KRW 1606.041156
KWD 0.353019
KYD 0.962287
KZT 620.951976
LAK 24983.460369
LBP 103468.048677
LKR 347.269186
LRD 231.529137
LSL 20.835551
LTL 3.408569
LVL 0.69827
LYD 6.285795
MAD 10.519104
MDL 19.659871
MGA 5136.533832
MKD 61.547579
MMK 2423.0019
MNT 4147.213072
MOP 9.337188
MRU 46.121173
MUR 53.135813
MVR 17.779136
MWK 2002.397941
MXN 21.812978
MYR 4.880123
MZN 73.833727
NAD 20.835551
NGN 1764.715011
NIO 42.492137
NOK 11.855856
NPR 162.078293
NZD 1.95836
OMR 0.443839
PAB 1.154745
PEN 4.125678
PGK 4.86639
PHP 66.597006
PKR 327.520946
PLN 4.278117
PYG 8649.470447
QAR 4.211103
RON 5.076366
RSD 117.20943
RUB 92.57844
RWF 1670.398802
SAR 4.33119
SBD 9.509014
SCR 16.961134
SDG 693.204468
SEK 11.173441
SGD 1.487574
SHP 0.907157
SLE 26.493021
SLL 24206.665048
SOS 659.982786
SRD 42.527602
STD 23893.225834
STN 24.507
SVC 10.103886
SYP 15009.436771
SZL 20.827949
THB 37.46003
TJS 10.866545
TMT 4.051855
TND 3.404973
TOP 2.70366
TRY 46.948264
TTD 7.83517
TWD 34.551621
TZS 2851.305914
UAH 48.143251
UGX 4133.180512
USD 1.154375
UYU 46.353239
UZS 14575.162933
VES 145.592451
VND 30302.336151
VUV 137.839906
WST 3.200466
XAF 656.152935
XAG 0.030813
XAU 0.000344
XCD 3.119755
XCG 2.081176
XDR 0.813734
XOF 656.144407
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.453874
ZAR 20.804721
ZMK 10390.758867
ZMW 26.588825
ZWL 371.708186
  • SCU

    0.0000

    12.72

    0%

  • CMSC

    -0.0500

    23.02

    -0.22%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    74.94

    0%

  • RIO

    -0.0450

    59.955

    -0.08%

  • GSK

    -0.2700

    37.41

    -0.72%

  • NGG

    -0.2850

    72.365

    -0.39%

  • SCS

    -0.5500

    16.03

    -3.43%

  • CMSD

    -0.0600

    23.57

    -0.25%

  • AZN

    -0.0500

    74.54

    -0.07%

  • BTI

    0.2900

    55.84

    +0.52%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0500

    14.45

    -0.35%

  • RELX

    -1.2950

    50.675

    -2.56%

  • BCC

    2.8450

    85.555

    +3.33%

  • BCE

    0.5330

    23.843

    +2.24%

  • JRI

    0.0290

    13.229

    +0.22%

  • BP

    0.9250

    33.415

    +2.77%

  • VOD

    0.0350

    11.075

    +0.32%

Ukraine's cultural crucible embraces the art of war
Ukraine's cultural crucible embraces the art of war

Ukraine's cultural crucible embraces the art of war

A brick-sized printer head scoots back and forth, spraying a furled plastic banner with the silhouette of a mythical fighter pilot.

Text size:

Next door a drying glossy poster shows a tractor carting off a crippled Russian tank.

A nearby computer is loaded with a caricature of a slain invader. From his skeletal remains sprouts the stem of a sunflower, a national emblem of Ukraine.

Since Russia invaded Ukraine three weeks ago, the Zovnishnya Reklama print works has been a publishing hive for unashamedly patriotic billboards, posters, banners and stickers.

The back alley studio -- enveloped in the heady odour of ink -- is one of many outlets flooding the western city of Lviv with wartime messaging urging Ukraine on to victory.

"For us it is not propaganda," says manager Volodymyr Kotovych, 26, clambering over reams of industrial paper stacked like logs on the workshop floor.

"These are patriotic slogans that motivate our people and our soldiers to have a better fighting spirit."

- Call to arms -

Lviv is known as the cultural capital of Ukraine. Residents gamely concede the capital Kyiv is the heart of the country but contend their hometown houses the nation's soul.

In peacetime the city advertised its artful anima everywhere. Walls were plastered with invitations to stage performances and gallery exhibitions. The tunes of musical buskers overlapped in the cobbled streets.

But since Russia launched its invasion on February 24, the city of 700,000 has been decked with graphic and triumphant calls to arms -- from official channels, private enterprises and guerilla artists.

One billboard depicts Russian President Vladimir Putin's crumpled face in the dirt under a sketched boot emblazoned with the Ukrainian trident.

Another apes the style of World War II propaganda -- a snarling Russian bear is torn asunder by a smaller vicious badger sporting the yellow armband of the Ukrainian armed forces.

"Whoever attacks us with the sword will die by that sword," it declares, soliciting donations for the war effort.

From the opera theatre, three billowing drapes depict the folk heroes of the conflict.

The first lauds the "Ghost of Kyiv", a feted fighter ace. Another heralds border guards who died at their posts. The third, an engineer who martyred himself to thwart a Russian armoured advance.

The feats -- and even existence -- of some of the men depicted is contested but all are rousing characters in a story Ukraine is telling itself about the path to victory.

Kotovych clearly feels there is a kernel of emotional truth in the tales, even if they aren't entirely accurate.

The outlet he manages has given over 80 percent of its time to making such prints, as traditional advertising work has dried up under the strictures of wartime.

For him, the distinction between their work and propaganda is the grassroots demand for expressions of solidarity during a national trial.

"Propaganda happens in Russia, where people are told one thing but the truth is something else entirely," he said.

"This is done in the service of the people."

- Souvenirs of war -

Elsewhere in Lviv, there is evidence that Kotovych is correct -- spontaneous art has sprung up supporting Ukraine in the war.

A city centre archway is glued with an A4 poster of the Russian eagle, slashed across by the Ukrainian national colours of blue and yellow.

An overpass is stencilled with the image of a Molotov cocktail -- a symbol of the popular resistance to Russia's invasion.

Sheafs of photocopied flyers are crudely taped around gutters with the black and white image of a soldier, his brow furrowed in determination, as jets soar overhead.

Tourist shops along the narrow routes of the city centre are already marketing the emerging art to the public, further proof of its popularity.

At Kram, a souvenir boutique lined with merchandise, tote bags bear the image of President Volodymyr Zelensky, his clenched fist held high.

Chocolate bar wrappers are inked with portraits of national poet Taras Shevchenko in an army uniform.

"Propaganda or not, the Russians came to our land and we need to defend ourselves," says 21-year-old cashier Mykhailyna Yarmola.

In peaceful times Lviv -- just 70 kilometres (45 miles) from the Polish border -- was a tourist hotspot drawing in droves of visitors.

Now the traffic is overwhelmingly outgoing.

The UN says around 3.5 million have fled the country since the war began, leaving fewer and fewer to be buoyed up by arts and trinkets proffering hope.

Yarmola gestures at a confectionary branded with a message of defiance towards Russian warships -- their most popular item.

"People take them as a gift or as a souvenir if they are leaving for elsewhere, to Poland, as refugees," she says.

B.Svoboda--TPP