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DTSTART:20201101T020000
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221116T143000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221116T153000
SUMMARY:Teach-In on Russia’s War in Ukraine: Kateryna Iakovlenko, “The Materiali
	ty of the Ruins: History, Trauma, and War in Ukrainian Contemporary Art”
DESCRIPTION:\n&ldquo\;The Materiality of the Ruins: History\, Trauma\, a
	nd War in Ukrainian Contemporary Art&rdquo\;\n\nKateryna Iakovlenko\, Pu
	blic Program Curator\, PinchukArtCentre\n\nFacing civil revolution and w
	ar in 2014\, Ukrainian contemporary art took a documentary and archival 
	turn. Many artists and film directors began to take an interest in traum
	a\, looking into the most unpleasant moments of their history. However\,
	 when the full-scale invasion started in February 2022 and brutality and
	 violence increased\, many creators searched for a new language. In her 
	lecture\, contemporary art researcher and writer Kateryna Iakovlenko wil
	l discuss why &ldquo\;ruin&rdquo\; is Ukrainian artists&rsquo\; chosen m
	aterial and how it serves as a strategy for artistic and civic resistanc
	e to violence.\n\nKateryna Iakovlenko is a Luhansk-born Ukrainian visual
	 art researcher and writer. She worked as reporter and deputy web editor
	 of The Day newspaper (2012&ndash\;14)\, curator and program manager of 
	the Donbas Studies Research Project at Izolyatsia (2014&ndash\;15)\, and
	 as researcher and curator of public programs at PinchukArtCentre (2016&
	ndash\;21). Her current research touches upon the role of art and cultur
	e during political transformation and war.\n\nMeeting ID: 325 783 1800\n
	\nFor more details: https://events.la.psu.edu/event/kateryna-iakovlenko/
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<html><head></head><body><p><b>&ldquo;The M
	ateriality of the Ruins: History, Trauma, and War in Ukrainian Contempor
	ary Art&rdquo;</b></p><p><b>Kateryna Iakovlenko, Public Program Curator,
	 PinchukArtCentre</b></p><p>Facing civil revolution and war in 2014, Ukr
	ainian contemporary art took a documentary and archival turn. Many artis
	ts and film directors began to take an interest in trauma, looking into 
	the most unpleasant moments of their history. However, when the full-sca
	le invasion started in February 2022 and brutality and violence increase
	d, many creators searched for a new language. In her lecture, contempora
	ry art researcher and writer Kateryna Iakovlenko will discuss why &ldquo
	;ruin&rdquo; is Ukrainian artists&rsquo; chosen material and how it serv
	es as a strategy for artistic and civic resistance to violence.</p><p>Ka
	teryna Iakovlenko is a Luhansk-born Ukrainian visual art researcher and 
	writer. She worked as reporter and deputy web editor of <i>The Day </i>n
	ewspaper (2012&ndash;14), curator and program manager of the Donbas Stud
	ies Research Project at Izolyatsia (2014&ndash;15), and as researcher an
	d curator of public programs at PinchukArtCentre (2016&ndash;21). Her cu
	rrent research touches upon the role of art and culture during political
	 transformation and war.</p><p>Meeting ID: 325 783 1800</p><p>For more d
	etails: <a href='https://events.la.psu.edu/event/kateryna-iakovlenko/'>h
	ttps://events.la.psu.edu/event/kateryna-iakovlenko/</a></p></body></html
	>
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