Titled War: Made in Russia, the exhibition will last for three months. It features 25 unique artifacts that vividly showcase Russian crimes against the Ukrainian people starting with the illegal annexation of Crimea and the occupation of parts of Donbas in 2014.
Organized by the Pylyp Orlyk Foundation in partnership with the Ukrainian Institute in Prague and Kyiv’s WWII Museum, the show presents material evidence of the crimes the Russian government has committed against Ukraine in just over a decade.
“This exhibition is about objects,” the inaugural announcement said.
“Ordinary and extraordinary. With traces of blood, fragments, burned flesh, water, and fire. It’s about a combat medic who saved lives until his last breath, a Ukrainian pilot’s helmet recovered from the wreckage of a downed helicopter, a religious icon that survived the shelling of a wooden church, and a book on the history of imperial madness that burned in a fire after a Russian strike.”
The exhibition is hosted at Vrtbovska zahrada, Karmelitská 25, 118 00 Malá Strana.