Bucha

The work is dedicated to the atrocities that Russian soldiers committed in Kyiv suburbs (Bucha, Irpin, Borodyanka) in Ukraine in 2022. The signs of the real genocide of Ukrainians were revealed after deliberation of the villages. The terrible photos of the victims were contrasting with the blossoming spring – the time when the war crimes became public.

Fixel Font by MacPaw

Fixel is a multifunctional and flexible font that is suitable for any task. The font offers Text and Display width options, with nine weight options from Thin to Black. Boasting over 11 000 symbols, Fixel is one of the most extensive Cyrillic typefaces, with characters for all possible modern Cyrillic-based alphabets. With Fixel, designers can create effective, timeless visual content for any environment. Fixel not only enables impactful designs but also honors Ukraine’s graphic heritage.

Font POLIGLOT

The Polyglots font is being developed as part of the idea to find calligraphic similarities in different scripts from east to west. It is very interesting for a designer to create such a font approach when Hebrew, Greek and Cyrillic (and other scripts) look harmonious side by side, without losing their structural and elegant qualities and without turning into sterile geometry. The design is created for publications and projects of multi-writing and cross-cultural orientation. (Custom font)

36 Days of Type (10)

36 Days of Type is an annual creative project launched by the community of designers and artists on social networks, especially on Instagram. In this project, participants create the alphabet, “A” to “Z” and numbers “0” to “9” in 36 days. Each day is dedicated to a new symbol or number. The final result is an interesting accidental font.

The Ukrainian: Life and Culture magazine

“The Ukrainian: Life And Culture” is a quarterly print magazine for an English-language readership in the US and worldwide (2018-2021). Certificate of Typographic Excellence by Type Directors Club (2023). Editor-in-Chief: Inna Golovakha
Ukrainian Editor: Katia Klim
Contributing Editors: Will Hicks
Birgit Meade, Joseph Green, Penelope Bell
Artist/Designer: Oleksii Chekal

TRISTIUM

Poster for the Ukrainian-Swiss music festival in St. Gallen (Switzerland), dedication to anniversaries of composers Valentin Silvestrov (85) and Adolf Karl Zwicker (70). TRISTIUM
– the entire program of the concert was dedicated to the music of the modern Ukrainian composer Victoria Vita Poleva, who is celebrating her 60th birthday on the same day.

Jam Factory Art Center

Jam Factory Art Center is a revitalization project for a former liqor factory that was converted into a canned food factory in the Soviet era. After several years of vacancy, the former factory was bought in 2015 by Swiss and Austrian historian and philanthropist Harald Binder, who decided to build an art center.
AVR Development developed a working project for the revitalization of the factory and the area around it.

“Oh, the Red Viburnum in the Meadow”

Calligraphy, black paper, white ink, pen.
Is a Ukrainian patriotic march, first published in 1875 by Volodymyr Antonovych and Mykhailo Drahomanov. It was written in a modern treatment by the composer Stepan Charnetsky in 1914, in honor and memory of the Sich Riflemen of the First World War. This song is in the song “Hey Hey Rise Up” by the legendary band Pink Floyd, after video of Boombox soloist Andriy Khlyvnyuk, in which he sings “Oh, the Red Viburnum in the Meadow” on Sofia Square in Kyiv.

Oh, the Red Viburnum in the Meadow

Calligraphy of the text of the world-famous song of the Ukrainian rebels from Ukrainian Insurgent Army.
Calligraphy, red paper, white ink, pen.
“Ах, лента за лентою – набої подавай,
Вкраїнський повстанче, в бою не відступай!”
This song is in the song “Hey Hey Rise Up” by the legendary band Pink Floyd. The work of British rockers was inspired by the video of Boombox soloist Andriy Khlyvnyuk, in which he sings “Oh, the Red Viburnum in the Meadow” on Sofia Square in Kyiv.

Moirai

The work from Uninvited Symbols series. Mythological thinking founds the amulet in embroidered symbols on Ukrainian traditional shirts. Pragmatic thinking asks present-day destructions to become the foundation of a fortress of national self-awareness, protecting our future. Each element of the destroyed corresponds to the ethnographic region where the old photo was taken.
Mythological Moirai secures the order in Universe. And you know the 3 of Moirai. I see they 3 isn’t enough.

Stadt.Land.Schluss

This time, the interdisciplinary symposium Stadt.Land.Schluss is entirely focused on (post-)growth and poses the question: “How can we do with less?”

How do we design not just less, but the concept of less itself? What does it mean for a society built on growth? How can design contribute to ensuring that our foundations for life are not destroyed? Because we don’t have a problem with understanding, but with implementation. When we consider the influence of things like advertising and design on people’s behavior, we can recognize the potential.

Whether it’s climate change, the finiteness of resources, or social justice: in the medium term at least, there will have to be an ecological and social transformation of the economy. How will businesses and politics deal with this? Will they act or react? How do they face change and the challenges it presents? Could having less actually offer more opportunities?

How to do less?
This is not just a question, but the question—of survival. And doing less also needs to be shaped: fairer, better, more beautiful, more inclusive … that’s precisely the topic of the interdisciplinary symposium.

Featuring speakers from the fields of architecture, sociology, digitalization, design, Marxism, and political science, including a nun … and plenty of time for questions, discussions, conversations, and eating …

Stephan Lessenich
Sociologist and Director of the Institute for Social Research Frankfurt: “The Reality of Possibility or We Can Do Things Differently.”

Sarah-Indra Jungblut
from RESET: “Cheerful to Cloudy – How Harmful Is Digitalization to the Climate?”

Simon Wahlers
Designer with an office and edition named Zweifel. He contemplates how one can still be a creator while it feels like the world is falling apart.

Sister Daniela
from the Crescentia Monastery in Kaufbeuren: “For Me”—Monastic Philosophy of Life. Who knows better how to do “less”!?

Till Gröner
Founder of supertecture in Kaufbeuren, a volunteer organization for social construction projects worldwide: “Always Nice and Slow.”

Michael Jäger
Political scientist, Germanist, Marxist, and editor (der Freitag): “Ecodemocracy – How Democratic Processes Can Also Reach and Transform the Economy.”

… plus exciting short presentations from:
– Architects 4 Future (Munich Group) on “Enough Space!”
– ALPINLABOR Innsbruck: “More with Less – Low-Threshold Construction Projects as Initiators for Sustainable Development.”
– gruppe dezentral & urbanes.land with the vocabulary of “Letting Be.”
– Svenja Dalferth showcases her magazine “Abundance” (FH Pforzheim).
– Astrid Köppel resonanzOrganisationen, Wunsiedel: “Less Requires More Courage.”

Stadt.Land.Schluss

Tickets and further information here.
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