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To: All; UMCRevMom@aol.com

8 posted on 01/03/2023 5:08:18 PM PST by UMCRevMom@aol.com (Pray for God's intervention to stop Putin's invasion)
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To: UMCRevMom@aol.com

Nice fire trucks our taxpayer dollars are supplying the Ukes.

Wish that money was being used to defend our Southern border.


11 posted on 01/03/2023 5:21:45 PM PST by moovova ("The NEXT election is the most important election of our lifetimes!“ LOL...)
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To: UMCRevMom@aol.com

7 Anti-War Street Artists Still Working Inside Russia
By Jane Aaron

https://www.themoscowtimes.com/2023/01/02/7-anti-war-street-artists-still-working-inside-russia-a79835

1- From the very first day of the invasion of Ukraine, anti-war art has spilled onto the streets and squares of Russian cities. And, despite detentions and fines, for 10 months they have continued to protest against Russian militarism.
The Moscow Times picked seven of the most compelling anti-war artists and talked to some of them about their work and their lives. Vladimir Ovchinnikov at work. Vladimir

2- Art group Yav’s “Window onto Europe” Art group Yav / Instagram
The St. Petersburg experimental art group Yav (“reality”) was founded by Anastasia Vladychkina. “The motto of my life is ‘what does not kill me makes me stronger’,” she said.
Before February, members of Yav painted their murals on walls that many people could see, but after the war began they started to paint on abandoned buildings or fences — so there would be less chance of a fine.
One of their most recent works is called “A Window onto Europe” and was painted in an industrial district. This famous phrase was first used by Venetian poet Francesco Algarotti while traveling in Russia. Later, poet Alexander Pushkin used it in his poem “The Bronze Horseman.” Today St. Petersburg is still often called Russia’s “window onto Europe,” but in Yav’s work the window to the West is boarded up with concrete bricks splattered with blood.

3- Koin’s “Vladimir Solovyov”
The anonymous underground artist Koin started painting a series of horrific creatures when opposition leader Alexei Navalny was arrested in 2021. Since then, Koin has published devastating portraits of Russia’s politicians and elites on social media as grotesque vampires and monsters.
While not strictly speaking a “street” artist, his work is widely available online, particularly on social networks.
“Some time ago I stopped painting because I didn’t want to work on this horrific theme anymore, I didn’t want anything to do with dirty politics… But after Feb. 24 I started again, and now I just can’t stop. I was depressed and disappointed by the war and what people thought about it. I was disappointed in people. I don’t really know how to live with it. Maybe it sounds selfish, but I make art because it helps me. I release the toxic emotions that poison me — anger, rage, fear, disgust. I know that my work helps other people with that as well,” Koin told The Moscow Times.

4- Yelena Osipova
Yelena Osipova has been called “the conscience of St. Petersburg.” The 77-year-old pensioner has been protesting Putin’s regime for two decades. Although she has been fined and arrested many times, she won’t stop — even in wartime.
On the May 1 holiday, she took her latest work onto the city’s main street, Nevsky Prospekt. Her painting had the words “international solidarity,” “no war” and “21th century: wars kill humankind” on it.
Journalists Yelena Lukyanova and Alexei Dushutin from independent media outlet Novaya Gazeta had photographed her and were standing next to her when the police arrived. The journalists were sent to the police station, the police officers took Osipova home — and the painting was confiscated.

5- Ffchw’s “Only rain should fall from the sky”
Perm street artist Ffchw creates provocative street art about life in Russia. But sometimes the provocation is hardly provocative at all. On Dec. 24 he was detained while working on a new piece of street art called “See you…” written in different languages, including Ukrainian.
Ffchw’s favorite piece is called “Only rain should fall from the sky.”
“All of my artwork is done from the bottom of my heart, and I don’t regret anything,” he told The Moscow Times.
“After Feb. 24 I had to look for a new language for my statements. My art is divided into ‘before’ and ‘after.’ Now it is also accompanied by many emotions like guilt and fear over the horrific and catastrophic events that are taking place. I’m sure that art can change lives, but will it be able to change the regime? I don’t know.”

6- Vladimir Ovchinnikov
Vladimir Ovchinnikov, 85, is a well-known figure in Borovsk, a small town of 10,000 people not far from Moscow.
Ovchinnikov was fined 35,000 rubles ($475) earlier this year for a drawing of a little girl wearing the colors of the Ukrainian flag with three bombs falling onto one of the buildings in his town. Beneath her image he wrote: “STOP.”
The mural was painted over, but later Ovchinnikov painted a new piece on the same place — the word “bezumie” (“madness”) in Russian with the Latin letter Z — the Kremlin symbol of its “special military operation.”

7- Misha Marker
Misha Marker’s “Goes *****” Misha Marker / Instagram
The works of one of the most famous Russian street artists, Misha Marker, are painted over almost as soon as they appear on the streets of St. Petersburg. But that doesn’t stop him. Before the war, his work was shown in many galleries and museums, including the Russian Museum. Marker hides his face in public so that no one knows what he looks like — or his age.
In recent works, he uses five snowflake-like asterisks as a replacement for the Russian word for “war” (the word is forbidden under Russian law and people are supposed, instead, to use the phrase “special military operation.”)


14 posted on 01/03/2023 5:38:29 PM PST by UMCRevMom@aol.com (Pray for God's intervention to stop Putin's invasion)
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