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20.10.2008

From the editor / What's On

Funny how things go. There was Viktor Yushchenko in New York City recently, being feted as s hero by a Ukrainian - American community that still hasn't grasped the extent to which his presidency has been either a disappointment or an outrage against decency. Yushchenko's popularity back West is an indication of the gulf that exists between Ukraine's foreign supporters and local reality, and it's a shame, because it gets in the way of doing the right things. You can be on it: Yushchenko puts on an embroidered shirt and mentions Shevchenko, and the North American Ukrainophiles will swoon. Meanwhile, other Ukrainians of the sort who wouldn't be invited to a certain type of North American function in a hundred million years are actually doing good work on behalf of the country.

Take, at random, the often-demonised Viktor Pinchuk and his wife Elena Franchuk. Franchuk (who even has the never to be the daughter of Leonid Kuchma himself) has generated massive positive exposure for this country through her anti-AIDS work and by bringing Elton John and Paul McCartney to play Kyiv. Her husband's PinchukArtCentre, meanwhile, has had a galvanising effect on this city's cultural life. Even Pinchuk's adventures amidst the garishly rich of Western Europe are good for the country in a way - they get it noticed. And recently a friend of mine visited a top Western university where a benefactor had just endowed a programme in Ukrainian studies. Was it Pinchuk?

My friend's interlocutor refused to say, but there are reasons to think it was. Even if it wasn't, this ‘oligarch' who speaks Russian, who is not ethnically Ukrainian and who supported the ‘bad guys' during the Orange Revolution has arguably done more for Ukraine than everyone in Yushchenko's circle combined. Just don't tell anyone back West. Such news upsets the reassuring old categories of thought that still persist today, four long years after the Revolution.

Source: What's On
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In Vinnytsia, a mental health center of the nationwide network RETURNING (ukr. ПОВЕРНЕННЯ), founded by Victor and Olena Pinchuk, has opened

13.05.2026

The Vinnytsia Mental Health Center of the nationwide RETURNING network (ukr. ПОВЕРНЕННЯ) will provide free professional psychological support to more than 4,000 military personnel, veterans, and their families every year. The project was founded by Victor and Olena Pinchuk to support the mental health of Ukraine’s defenders, veterans, and their family members who have experienced the psychological consequences of the war caused by Russian aggression.



STILL JOY – FROM UKRAINE INTO THE WORLD @ BIENNALE ARTE 2026. A Collateral Event at the 61st International Art Exhibition — La Biennale di Venezia. Presented by the Victor Pinchuk Foundation and the PinchukArtCentre

08.05.2026

On 7 May 2026, the Victor Pinchuk Foundation and the PinchukArtCentre opened the project “Still Joy — From Ukraine Into the World” which is an official Collateral Event of the 61st International Art Exhibition — La Biennale di Venezia. During the opening ceremony, speeches were delivered by Victor Pinchuk, businessman and philanthropist, founder of the PinchukArtCentre; Tetyana Berezhna, Deputy Prime Minister for Humanitarian Policy of Ukraine and Minister of Culture of Ukraine; the exhibition’s curators Björn Geldhof, Artistic Director of the PinchukArtCentre, and Oleksandra Pogrebnyak. Hlib Stryzhko, a veteran and marine who returned from Russian captivity, and Yuliia “Phobia” a senior sergeant in the Armed Forces of Ukraine, marine and combat medic, also addressed the audience. 

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Created and supported by: «Art Depo» Creative Agency