We invite you to visit the exhibition “In the Eye of the Storm. Secession in Ukraine”, which will be open for visits on November 29.
The three halls of the museum will present 29 works from the museum’s collection and two paintings by Ivan Myasoyedov from the Poltava Art Museum (Art Gallery) named after Mykola Yaroshenko. The exhibition will bring together works by prominent representatives of Ukrainian art of the early 20th century – Oleksandr Murashko, Fedor and Vasyl Krychevsky, Mykhailo Zhuk, Abram Manevich, Vsevolod Maksimovich, Heorhiy Narbut, Oleksa Novakivsky, Petro Kholodny.
The exhibition will present a new work in the NAMU collection for the first time – a sketch for the diploma work “Argonauts” [1909] by Ivan Myasoyedov. The collection was replenished thanks to the support of Acordbank. And now the museum owns the work of one of the most important artists of the Secession era.
The exhibition is being organized under constant threats, but visitors will be able to see the works in the safest halls of the museum’s first floor. The beloved works have recently returned to Kyiv, and before being transported to storage, the permanent exhibition and new paintings will be available for viewing. The exhibition will last until the end of the year, so a Christmas meeting with masterpieces will be waiting for you.
Exhibition curators: Yulia Lytvynets, Marina Drobotyuk.
Musical accompaniment: Mishukoff.
📌 The exhibition will be open throughout December. The museum is open on Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays from 12:00 to 18:00.
📌 Museum address: 6 Hrushevskoho St. You can get to the exhibition through the service entrance at the back of the museum. To do this, you need to go around the building to the right along Museum Lane.
📌Price: full ticket – 250 UAH, concessional (schoolchildren, students, pensioners) – 100 UAH, free admission for military personnel.
📌In the event of an air raid alert, we ask all visitors to immediately head to the shelter. The nearest shelters are located at 4 Khreshchatyk St. (underpass near the Dnipro Hotel) and at the Maidan Nezalezhnosti metro station.