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  • Russian Ballistic Missile Hit A Residential Apartment Building In Kyiv
    DUKAS_186101974_NUR
    Russian Ballistic Missile Hit A Residential Apartment Building In Kyiv
    Rescuers work at the site where a Russian ballistic missile strikes a residential apartment building in Kyiv, Ukraine, on June 17, 2025. According to preliminary reports, 15 people are killed and 114 injured. Russia launches 440 attack drones and 32 cruise and ballistic missiles across Ukraine during the strike. (Photo by Maxym Marusenko/NurPhoto)

     

  • Russian Ballistic Missile Hit A Residential Apartment Building In Kyiv
    DUKAS_186101966_NUR
    Russian Ballistic Missile Hit A Residential Apartment Building In Kyiv
    Rescuers work at the site where a Russian ballistic missile strikes a residential apartment building in Kyiv, Ukraine, on June 17, 2025. According to preliminary reports, 15 people are killed and 114 injured. Russia launches 440 attack drones and 32 cruise and ballistic missiles across Ukraine during the strike. (Photo by Maxym Marusenko/NurPhoto)

     

  • Russian Ballistic Missile Hit A Residential Apartment Building In Kyiv
    DUKAS_186101960_NUR
    Russian Ballistic Missile Hit A Residential Apartment Building In Kyiv
    Rescuers work at the site where a Russian ballistic missile strikes a residential apartment building in Kyiv, Ukraine, on June 17, 2025. According to preliminary reports, 15 people are killed and 114 injured. Russia launches 440 attack drones and 32 cruise and ballistic missiles across Ukraine during the strike. (Photo by Maxym Marusenko/NurPhoto)

     

  • Russian Ballistic Missile Hit A Residential Apartment Building In Kyiv
    DUKAS_186101955_NUR
    Russian Ballistic Missile Hit A Residential Apartment Building In Kyiv
    Rescuers work at the site where a Russian ballistic missile strikes a residential apartment building in Kyiv, Ukraine, on June 17, 2025. According to preliminary reports, 15 people are killed and 114 injured. Russia launches 440 attack drones and 32 cruise and ballistic missiles across Ukraine during the strike. (Photo by Maxym Marusenko/NurPhoto)

     

  • Russian Ballistic Missile Hit A Residential Apartment Building In Kyiv
    DUKAS_186101945_NUR
    Russian Ballistic Missile Hit A Residential Apartment Building In Kyiv
    Rescuers work at the site where a Russian ballistic missile strikes a residential apartment building in Kyiv, Ukraine, on June 17, 2025. According to preliminary reports, 15 people are killed and 114 injured. Russia launches 440 attack drones and 32 cruise and ballistic missiles across Ukraine during the strike. (Photo by Maxym Marusenko/NurPhoto)

     

  • Russian Ballistic Missile Hit A Residential Apartment Building In Kyiv
    DUKAS_186101940_NUR
    Russian Ballistic Missile Hit A Residential Apartment Building In Kyiv
    Rescuers work at the site where a Russian ballistic missile strikes a residential apartment building in Kyiv, Ukraine, on June 17, 2025. According to preliminary reports, 15 people are killed and 114 injured. Russia launches 440 attack drones and 32 cruise and ballistic missiles across Ukraine during the strike. (Photo by Maxym Marusenko/NurPhoto)

     

  • Russian Ballistic Missile Hit A Residential Apartment Building In Kyiv
    DUKAS_186101926_NUR
    Russian Ballistic Missile Hit A Residential Apartment Building In Kyiv
    Rescuers work at the site where a Russian ballistic missile strikes a residential apartment building in Kyiv, Ukraine, on June 17, 2025. According to preliminary reports, 15 people are killed and 114 injured. Russia launches 440 attack drones and 32 cruise and ballistic missiles across Ukraine during the strike. (Photo by Maxym Marusenko/NurPhoto)

     

  • Russian Ballistic Missile Hit A Residential Apartment Building In Kyiv
    DUKAS_186101918_NUR
    Russian Ballistic Missile Hit A Residential Apartment Building In Kyiv
    Rescuers work at the site where a Russian ballistic missile strikes a residential apartment building in Kyiv, Ukraine, on June 17, 2025. According to preliminary reports, 15 people are killed and 114 injured. Russia launches 440 attack drones and 32 cruise and ballistic missiles across Ukraine during the strike. (Photo by Maxym Marusenko/NurPhoto)

     

  • Russian Ballistic Missile Hit A Residential Apartment Building In Kyiv
    DUKAS_186101910_NUR
    Russian Ballistic Missile Hit A Residential Apartment Building In Kyiv
    Rescuers work at the site where a Russian ballistic missile strikes a residential apartment building in Kyiv, Ukraine, on June 17, 2025. According to preliminary reports, 15 people are killed and 114 injured. Russia launches 440 attack drones and 32 cruise and ballistic missiles across Ukraine during the strike. (Photo by Maxym Marusenko/NurPhoto)

     

  • Russian Ballistic Missile Hit A Residential Apartment Building In Kyiv
    DUKAS_186101906_NUR
    Russian Ballistic Missile Hit A Residential Apartment Building In Kyiv
    Rescuers work at the site where a Russian ballistic missile strikes a residential apartment building in Kyiv, Ukraine, on June 17, 2025. According to preliminary reports, 15 people are killed and 114 injured. Russia launches 440 attack drones and 32 cruise and ballistic missiles across Ukraine during the strike. (Photo by Maxym Marusenko/NurPhoto)

     

  • Russian Ballistic Missile Hit A Residential Apartment Building In Kyiv
    DUKAS_186101902_NUR
    Russian Ballistic Missile Hit A Residential Apartment Building In Kyiv
    Thick black smoke from fires caused by a massive Russian missile and drone attack rises over a residential area in Kyiv, Ukraine, on June 17, 2025. According to preliminary reports, 15 people are killed and 114 injured. Russia launches 440 attack drones and 32 cruise and ballistic missiles across Ukraine during the overnight strike. (Photo by Maxym Marusenko/NurPhoto)

     

  • Russian Ballistic Missile Hit A Residential Apartment Building In Kyiv
    DUKAS_186101897_NUR
    Russian Ballistic Missile Hit A Residential Apartment Building In Kyiv
    Rescuers work at the site where a Russian ballistic missile strikes a residential apartment building in Kyiv, Ukraine, on June 17, 2025. According to preliminary reports, 15 people are killed and 114 injured. Russia launches 440 attack drones and 32 cruise and ballistic missiles across Ukraine during the strike. (Photo by Maxym Marusenko/NurPhoto)

     

  • Russian Ballistic Missile Hit A Residential Apartment Building In Kyiv
    DUKAS_186101893_NUR
    Russian Ballistic Missile Hit A Residential Apartment Building In Kyiv
    A Russian ballistic missile hits a residential apartment building in Kyiv, Ukraine, on June 17, 2025, during a massive overnight attack. According to preliminary reports, 15 people are killed and 114 injured. Russia launches 440 attack drones and 32 cruise and ballistic missiles across Ukraine during the strike. (Photo by Maxym Marusenko/NurPhoto)

     

  • Russian Ballistic Missile Hit A Residential Apartment Building In Kyiv
    DUKAS_186101889_NUR
    Russian Ballistic Missile Hit A Residential Apartment Building In Kyiv
    A Russian ballistic missile hits a residential apartment building in Kyiv, Ukraine, on June 17, 2025, during a massive overnight attack. According to preliminary reports, 15 people are killed and 114 injured. Russia launches 440 attack drones and 32 cruise and ballistic missiles across Ukraine during the strike. (Photo by Maxym Marusenko/NurPhoto)

     

  • Russian Ballistic Missile Hit A Residential Apartment Building In Kyiv
    DUKAS_186101881_NUR
    Russian Ballistic Missile Hit A Residential Apartment Building In Kyiv
    A Russian ballistic missile hits a residential apartment building in Kyiv, Ukraine, on June 17, 2025, during a massive overnight attack. According to preliminary reports, 15 people are killed and 114 injured. Russia launches 440 attack drones and 32 cruise and ballistic missiles across Ukraine during the strike. (Photo by Maxym Marusenko/NurPhoto)

     

  • Russian Ballistic Missile Hit A Residential Apartment Building In Kyiv
    DUKAS_186101877_NUR
    Russian Ballistic Missile Hit A Residential Apartment Building In Kyiv
    Rescuers work at the site where a Russian ballistic missile strikes a residential apartment building in Kyiv, Ukraine, on June 17, 2025. According to preliminary reports, 15 people are killed and 114 injured. Russia launches 440 attack drones and 32 cruise and ballistic missiles across Ukraine during the strike. (Photo by Maxym Marusenko/NurPhoto)

     

  • Russian Ballistic Missile Hit A Residential Apartment Building In Kyiv
    DUKAS_186101873_NUR
    Russian Ballistic Missile Hit A Residential Apartment Building In Kyiv
    Rescuers work at the site where a Russian ballistic missile strikes a residential apartment building in Kyiv, Ukraine, on June 17, 2025. According to preliminary reports, 15 people are killed and 114 injured. Russia launches 440 attack drones and 32 cruise and ballistic missiles across Ukraine during the strike. (Photo by Maxym Marusenko/NurPhoto)

     

  • Russian Ballistic Missile Hit A Residential Apartment Building In Kyiv
    DUKAS_186101869_NUR
    Russian Ballistic Missile Hit A Residential Apartment Building In Kyiv
    A Russian ballistic missile hits a residential apartment building in Kyiv, Ukraine, on June 17, 2025, during a massive overnight attack. According to preliminary reports, 15 people are killed and 114 injured. Russia launches 440 attack drones and 32 cruise and ballistic missiles across Ukraine during the strike. (Photo by Maxym Marusenko/NurPhoto)

     

  • Security Situation Along Line Of Control In Indian-Administered Kashmir
    DUKAS_184474663_NUR
    Security Situation Along Line Of Control In Indian-Administered Kashmir
    A boy holds a Quran near a house that is damaged due to border shelling between India and Pakistan on the Line of Control in Uri, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on May 9, 2025. (Photo by Nasir Kachroo/NurPhoto)

     

  • Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    DUKAS_173010620_EYE
    Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    After Russia’s invasion in 2022, historian Leonid Marushchak saw that Ukraine’s cultural heritage was under threat, too. So he vowed to get to these irreplaceable works before Putin’s forces could. Photographs by Julia Kochetova, Ed Ram and Natalka Diachenko.

    Arif Bagirov, originally from Severodonetsk (now - occupied by Russia), is posing for a portrait. Arif is a part of the evacuation crew.

    Julia Kochetova / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Julia Kochetova

     

  • Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    DUKAS_173010616_EYE
    Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    After Russia’s invasion in 2022, historian Leonid Marushchak saw that Ukraine’s cultural heritage was under threat, too. So he vowed to get to these irreplaceable works before Putin’s forces could. Photographs by Julia Kochetova, Ed Ram and Natalka Diachenko.

    Arif Bagirov, originally from Severodonetsk (now - occupied by Russia), is posing for a portrait. Arif is a part of the evacuation crew.

    Julia Kochetova / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Julia Kochetova

     

  • Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    DUKAS_173010612_EYE
    Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    After RussiaÕs invasion in 2022, historian Leonid Marushchak saw that UkraineÕs cultural heritage was under threat, too. So he vowed to get to these irreplaceable works before PutinÕs forces could. Photographs by Julia Kochetova, Ed Ram and Natalka Diachenko.

    Leonid Marushchak, Yevhen Sternichuk and Marharita Kravchenko with the van they used to retrieve countless artworks before it was nearly destroyed in a drone attack in the Kherson region.

    Julia Kochetova / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Julia Kochetova

     

  • Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    DUKAS_173010613_EYE
    Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    After RussiaÕs invasion in 2022, historian Leonid Marushchak saw that UkraineÕs cultural heritage was under threat, too. So he vowed to get to these irreplaceable works before PutinÕs forces could. Photographs by Julia Kochetova, Ed Ram and Natalka Diachenko.

    Leonid Marushchak, Yevhen Sternichuk and Marharita Kravchenko with the van they used to retrieve countless artworks before it was nearly destroyed in a drone attack in the Kherson region.

    Julia Kochetova / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Julia Kochetova

     

  • Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    DUKAS_173010627_EYE
    Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    After Russia’s invasion in 2022, historian Leonid Marushchak saw that Ukraine’s cultural heritage was under threat, too. So he vowed to get to these irreplaceable works before Putin’s forces could. Photographs by Julia Kochetova, Ed Ram and Natalka Diachenko.

    Leonid Marushchak is showing the damaged vehicle.

    Julia Kochetova / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Julia Kochetova

     

  • Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    DUKAS_173010614_EYE
    Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    After RussiaÕs invasion in 2022, historian Leonid Marushchak saw that UkraineÕs cultural heritage was under threat, too. So he vowed to get to these irreplaceable works before PutinÕs forces could. Photographs by Julia Kochetova, Ed Ram and Natalka Diachenko.

    Diana Berg, a Ukrainian artist, cultural manager and activist, who has supported her friend MarushchakÕs efforts to rescue UkraineÕs cultural heritage. She is photographed with banners used in Pride and pro-Ukrainian marches and demos in Mariupol, the city she fled when it was besieged in 2022.

    Julia Kochetova / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Julia Kochetova

     

  • Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    DUKAS_173010621_EYE
    Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    After Russia’s invasion in 2022, historian Leonid Marushchak saw that Ukraine’s cultural heritage was under threat, too. So he vowed to get to these irreplaceable works before Putin’s forces could. Photographs by Julia Kochetova, Ed Ram and Natalka Diachenko.

    Leonid Marushchak is posing for a portrait with 2 evacuated art works.

    Julia Kochetova / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Julia Kochetova

     

  • Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    DUKAS_173010611_EYE
    Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    After RussiaÕs invasion in 2022, historian Leonid Marushchak saw that UkraineÕs cultural heritage was under threat, too. So he vowed to get to these irreplaceable works before PutinÕs forces could. Photographs by Julia Kochetova, Ed Ram and Natalka Diachenko.

    A detail of an artwork from MarushchakÕs personal collection. He has organised the evacuation of dozens of museums across UkraineÕs frontline Ð packing, recording, logging and counting each item and sending them to secret, secure locations away from the combat zone

    Julia Kochetova / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Julia Kochetova

     

  • Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    DUKAS_173010619_EYE
    Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    After Russia’s invasion in 2022, historian Leonid Marushchak saw that Ukraine’s cultural heritage was under threat, too. So he vowed to get to these irreplaceable works before Putin’s forces could. Photographs by Julia Kochetova, Ed Ram and Natalka Diachenko.

    The old icon image, evacuated by Leonid's team.

    Julia Kochetova / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Julia Kochetova

     

  • Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    DUKAS_173010626_EYE
    Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    After Russia’s invasion in 2022, historian Leonid Marushchak saw that Ukraine’s cultural heritage was under threat, too. So he vowed to get to these irreplaceable works before Putin’s forces could. Photographs by Julia Kochetova, Ed Ram and Natalka Diachenko.

    The old icon image, evacuated by Leonid's team.

    Julia Kochetova / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Julia Kochetova

     

  • Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    DUKAS_173010625_EYE
    Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    After RussiaÕs invasion in 2022, historian Leonid Marushchak saw that UkraineÕs cultural heritage was under threat, too. So he vowed to get to these irreplaceable works before PutinÕs forces could. Photographs by Julia Kochetova, Ed Ram and Natalka Diachenko.

    An antique religious icon from Leonid MarushchakÕs personal collection. Along with a motley crew of drivers and helpers, Marushchak has been working tirelessly Ð and dangerously Ð to retrieve and evacuate works of art from museums and cultural centres across eastern Ukraine before Russian forces have the chance to loot them. From modern ceramics to 17th-century paintings, Marushchak and co have gathered tens of thousands of works and whisked them away to safe (and secret) locations away from the front lines of the war.

    Julia Kochetova / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Julia Kochetova

     

  • Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    DUKAS_173010617_EYE
    Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    After Russia’s invasion in 2022, historian Leonid Marushchak saw that Ukraine’s cultural heritage was under threat, too. So he vowed to get to these irreplaceable works before Putin’s forces could. Photographs by Julia Kochetova, Ed Ram and Natalka Diachenko.

    Art work at Leonid Marushchak's apartment in Kyiv.

    Julia Kochetova / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Julia Kochetova

     

  • Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    DUKAS_173010629_EYE
    Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    After Russia’s invasion in 2022, historian Leonid Marushchak saw that Ukraine’s cultural heritage was under threat, too. So he vowed to get to these irreplaceable works before Putin’s forces could. Photographs by Julia Kochetova, Ed Ram and Natalka Diachenko.

    Art works at Leonid Marushchak's apartment in Kyiv.

    Julia Kochetova / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Julia Kochetova

     

  • Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    DUKAS_173010622_EYE
    Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    After RussiaÕs invasion in 2022, historian Leonid Marushchak saw that UkraineÕs cultural heritage was under threat, too. So he vowed to get to these irreplaceable works before PutinÕs forces could. Photographs by Julia Kochetova, Ed Ram and Natalka Diachenko.

    Marushchak at his apartment in Kyiv with works from his personal collection.

    Julia Kochetova / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Julia Kochetova

     

  • Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    DUKAS_173010623_EYE
    Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    After Russia’s invasion in 2022, historian Leonid Marushchak saw that Ukraine’s cultural heritage was under threat, too. So he vowed to get to these irreplaceable works before Putin’s forces could. Photographs by Julia Kochetova, Ed Ram and Natalka Diachenko.

    Leonid Marushchak is showing different art pieces which were evacuated thanks to his team.

    Julia Kochetova / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Julia Kochetova

     

  • Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    DUKAS_173010637_EYE
    Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    After RussiaÕs invasion in 2022, historian Leonid Marushchak saw that UkraineÕs cultural heritage was under threat, too. So he vowed to get to these irreplaceable works before PutinÕs forces could. Photographs by Julia Kochetova, Ed Ram and Natalka Diachenko.

    Leonid Marushchak with an art work by Ukrainian ceramicist Nina Fedorova, from his personal collection.

    Julia Kochetova / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Julia Kochetova

     

  • Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    DUKAS_173010630_EYE
    Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    After RussiaÕs invasion in 2022, historian Leonid Marushchak saw that UkraineÕs cultural heritage was under threat, too. So he vowed to get to these irreplaceable works before PutinÕs forces could. Photographs by Julia Kochetova, Ed Ram and Natalka Diachenko.

    ÔYou acknowledge to yourself you might die. But itÕs too early for me Ð I have cats at home that need looking afterÕ É Marharita Kravchenko, a driver who has worked with Marushchak on evacuating art from some of UkraineÕs most dangerous hotspots.

    Julia Kochetova / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Julia Kochetova

     

  • Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    DUKAS_173010618_EYE
    Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    After RussiaÕs invasion in 2022, historian Leonid Marushchak saw that UkraineÕs cultural heritage was under threat, too. So he vowed to get to these irreplaceable works before PutinÕs forces could. Photographs by Julia Kochetova, Ed Ram and Natalka Diachenko.

    Zhanna Kadyrova, a Ukrainian artist, at her studio in Kyiv, showing one of her works from a series titled Anxiety, a traditional found embroidery with the Ukrainian for Ôair raid alertÕ stitched over it. ÔHe works 24/7,Õ she said of Marushchak. ÔEven the most resilient person has his limits.Õ

    Julia Kochetova / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Julia Kochetova

     

  • Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    DUKAS_173010624_EYE
    Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    After RussiaÕs invasion in 2022, historian Leonid Marushchak saw that UkraineÕs cultural heritage was under threat, too. So he vowed to get to these irreplaceable works before PutinÕs forces could. Photographs by Julia Kochetova, Ed Ram and Natalka Diachenko.

    Kateryna Chuyeva, former deputy minister of culture, and a friend and collaborator of MarushchakÕs. The importance of the small regional museums that he has helped safeguard is incalculable, Chuyeva said, especially in the light of the losses that Ukraine has suffered to its culture over the centuries. ÔWe have so many gaps, we have so many lost objects and documents and traditions, that we just cannot go in this way any more. We have to stop it, we have to protect what we do have.Õ

    Julia Kochetova / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Julia Kochetova

     

  • Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    DUKAS_173010615_EYE
    Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    After Russia’s invasion in 2022, historian Leonid Marushchak saw that Ukraine’s cultural heritage was under threat, too. So he vowed to get to these irreplaceable works before Putin’s forces could. Photographs by Julia Kochetova, Ed Ram and Natalka Diachenko.

    Valeriia Nasedkina, Volodymyr Chehrynets, and Vasyl Dmytryk, at his art studio.

    Julia Kochetova / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Julia Kochetova

     

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    PETER PAN SPEEDROCK 2023.06 Hellfest
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    © DALLE aprf

     

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    dukas 158787102 dal
    PETER PAN SPEEDROCK 2023.06 Hellfest
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    © DALLE aprf

     

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    dukas 158787101 dal
    PETER PAN SPEEDROCK 2023.06 Hellfest
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    © DALLE aprf

     

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    dukas 158787084 dal
    2023.06 Hellfest- LESS THAN JAKE
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  • Pop up operating  theatre for war and disaster zones.
    DUKAS_155621573_FER
    Pop up operating theatre for war and disaster zones.
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Operation 1
    Ref 14808
    24/05/2023
    See Ferrari text
    Pictures must credit: SurgiBox

    A pop-up operating theatre for use on the battlefield or at disaster scenes has been developed.

    It enables surgery to be performed outside of a sterile room and reduce the time it takes to perform potentially life-saving treatment.

    The SurgiField consists a sealed single-use clear plastic, disposable bubble, an electric-air-pump-equipped control module and a rechargeable lithium-ion battery.

    All three can reportedly be carried in a single backpack, and put together in just a few minutes.

    For surgery, the pre-sterilised bubble with collapsible frame is placed over the area of the body targeted in the operation.

    The control unit maintains purified air flow inside the bubble using a hose hose.

    The surgeon works in the patient through two inward-facing armholes.

    Once the procedure has been completed, the bubble gets removed and discarded, and the rest of the system is packed back up.

    It has been has been created by US company SurgiBox, a spin -off company from the USA’s Massachusetts Institute of Technoogy. (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Pop up operating  theatre for war and disaster zones.
    DUKAS_155621572_FER
    Pop up operating theatre for war and disaster zones.
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Operation 1
    Ref 14808
    24/05/2023
    See Ferrari text
    Pictures must credit: SurgiBox

    A pop-up operating theatre for use on the battlefield or at disaster scenes has been developed.

    It enables surgery to be performed outside of a sterile room and reduce the time it takes to perform potentially life-saving treatment.

    The SurgiField consists a sealed single-use clear plastic, disposable bubble, an electric-air-pump-equipped control module and a rechargeable lithium-ion battery.

    All three can reportedly be carried in a single backpack, and put together in just a few minutes.

    For surgery, the pre-sterilised bubble with collapsible frame is placed over the area of the body targeted in the operation.

    The control unit maintains purified air flow inside the bubble using a hose hose.

    The surgeon works in the patient through two inward-facing armholes.

    Once the procedure has been completed, the bubble gets removed and discarded, and the rest of the system is packed back up.

    It has been has been created by US company SurgiBox, a spin -off company from the USA’s Massachusetts Institute of Technoogy. (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Pop up operating  theatre for war and disaster zones.
    DUKAS_155621571_FER
    Pop up operating theatre for war and disaster zones.
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Operation 1
    Ref 14808
    24/05/2023
    See Ferrari text
    Pictures must credit: SurgiBox

    A pop-up operating theatre for use on the battlefield or at disaster scenes has been developed.

    It enables surgery to be performed outside of a sterile room and reduce the time it takes to perform potentially life-saving treatment.

    The SurgiField consists a sealed single-use clear plastic, disposable bubble, an electric-air-pump-equipped control module and a rechargeable lithium-ion battery.

    All three can reportedly be carried in a single backpack, and put together in just a few minutes.

    For surgery, the pre-sterilised bubble with collapsible frame is placed over the area of the body targeted in the operation.

    The control unit maintains purified air flow inside the bubble using a hose hose.

    The surgeon works in the patient through two inward-facing armholes.

    Once the procedure has been completed, the bubble gets removed and discarded, and the rest of the system is packed back up.

    It has been has been created by US company SurgiBox, a spin -off company from the USA’s Massachusetts Institute of Technoogy. (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Pop up operating  theatre for war and disaster zones.
    DUKAS_155621557_FER
    Pop up operating theatre for war and disaster zones.
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Operation 1
    Ref 14808
    24/05/2023
    See Ferrari text
    Pictures must credit: SurgiBox

    A pop-up operating theatre for use on the battlefield or at disaster scenes has been developed.

    It enables surgery to be performed outside of a sterile room and reduce the time it takes to perform potentially life-saving treatment.

    The SurgiField consists a sealed single-use clear plastic, disposable bubble, an electric-air-pump-equipped control module and a rechargeable lithium-ion battery.

    All three can reportedly be carried in a single backpack, and put together in just a few minutes.

    For surgery, the pre-sterilised bubble with collapsible frame is placed over the area of the body targeted in the operation.

    The control unit maintains purified air flow inside the bubble using a hose hose.

    The surgeon works in the patient through two inward-facing armholes.

    Once the procedure has been completed, the bubble gets removed and discarded, and the rest of the system is packed back up.

    It has been has been created by US company SurgiBox, a spin -off company from the USA’s Massachusetts Institute of Technoogy. (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    DUKAS_173010628_EYE
    Ukraine's art evacuators: the intrepid team rescuing art from a warzone - in pictures
    After Russia’s invasion in 2022, historian Leonid Marushchak saw that Ukraine’s cultural heritage was under threat, too. So he vowed to get to these irreplaceable works before Putin’s forces could. Photographs by Julia Kochetova, Ed Ram and Natalka Diachenko.

    Marta Bilas, the wife of Leonid Marushchak, is posing for a portrait in Podil district in Kyiv.

    Julia Kochetova / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

     

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