Unlock Free Global Shipping at $50
Solomiya No 3 - Premium Handmade Ukrainian Ceramic Mug for Coffee & Tea | Perfect Gift for Home, Office & Cafe Use
Solomiya No 3 - Premium Handmade Ukrainian Ceramic Mug for Coffee & Tea | Perfect Gift for Home, Office & Cafe UseSolomiya No 3 - Premium Handmade Ukrainian Ceramic Mug for Coffee & Tea | Perfect Gift for Home, Office & Cafe UseSolomiya No 3 - Premium Handmade Ukrainian Ceramic Mug for Coffee & Tea | Perfect Gift for Home, Office & Cafe UseSolomiya No 3 - Premium Handmade Ukrainian Ceramic Mug for Coffee & Tea | Perfect Gift for Home, Office & Cafe UseSolomiya No 3 - Premium Handmade Ukrainian Ceramic Mug for Coffee & Tea | Perfect Gift for Home, Office & Cafe Use

Solomiya No 3 - Premium Handmade Ukrainian Ceramic Mug for Coffee & Tea | Perfect Gift for Home, Office & Cafe Use

$13.2 $24 -45%

Delivery & Return:Free shipping on all orders over $50

Estimated Delivery:7-15 days international

People:8 people viewing this product right now!

Easy Returns:Enjoy hassle-free returns within 30 days!

Payment:Secure checkout

SKU:95076780

Guranteed safe checkout
amex
paypal
discover
mastercard
visa

Product Description

The magazine Solomiya is not an ordinary one. It was founded in April 2022 by photographers Vsevolod Kazarin from Kyiv and Sebastian Wells from Berlin to photograph young people on the streets of Kyiv and to showcase the work of other young artists from Ukraine.

The third issue of Solomiya is as desperate as it is full of love, beauty, courage, and an unsettling longing for “a journey, an escape, and freedom,” as Yevhen, a young soldier from Odesa, puts it in War Dreams, a poignant series of portraits by Italian photographers Caimi&Piccini. While raising thought-provoking questions about masculinity in war through the recent work of Vsevolod Kazarin, Alex Mashtaler’s yet unpublished photographs juxtapose the innocence of youth with the unforgiving harshness of reality – a reality shaped by Ukraine’s colonial past and a present challenged by ongoing militarization. In interviews with the Solomiya Editors Andrii Ushytskyi, Ivanna Kozachenko and Sebastian Wells, Asia Bazdyrieva, Maxim Dondyuk, and Henrike Naumann further explore these complexities through their own perspectives and artistic practices. While Ivanna Kozachenko and the artist collective Commercial Public Art dissect the spatial strategies of the architecture built by Russian forces in the occupied territories of Ukraine, the writings of Lucy Zoria and Sebastian Wells offer diverse insights into the lived experiences of young Ukrainians abroad.

Published by SHIFT BOOKS
Softcover
132 pages
310 x 230 mm
ISBN 9783948174262