WWD Digital Daily

For Ukraine

- — RHONDA RICHFORD

Nearly a year on from the invasion of Ukraine, photograph­er Mark Abegg is launching “Models for Ukraine,” a multimedia portrait project aimed at keeping the conflict in people's consciousn­ess while raising funds for charity.

Swiss British fashion PR-turned- photograph­er Abegg turned his lens on Ukrainian models for a raw series of black- and-white shots that debuted at Paris' Oddity gallery and event space Wednesday night.

Abegg worked with casting director Maxime Valentini, who reached out to Paris- based agencies to bring in Ukrainian models, with shoots taking place in December and January. Benjamin Grillon artdirecte­d the unvarnishe­d shots, which feature the models bare-faced and in plain white shirts.

Those posing include Nana Abramova, Naty Chabanenko, Polly Domashych, Sasha Krivosheya and Vika Reza, among others.

The gallery event featured clips of the models speaking about their emotions and personal experience­s during the war, while a tabloid-style newspaper filled with the photos was on offer.

All proceeds from the prints and paper sale will go to Ukrainian organizati­on Women's March, which operates shelters and assists women and children displaced by the war.

Abegg's friendship with model Pasha Harulia and her husband Dmytro Novichenko inspired him to embark on the project. Harulia helped guide him as they worked to create a project that would not only keep Ukraine in focus, but also help people draw connection­s between the current economic crises in Europe and the global consequenc­es of the localized war.

“What I was trying to do is just to create awareness that there are Ukrainian people around us that are suffering and that we are suffering ourselves because of this, maybe it's not directly affecting us because it's not our families, or we don't see it from day to day, but it is happening,” he said. Inflation and the cost-of-living crisis that are causing hardship around the world are an indirect result of the war, he noted.

The project aims to remind people that even if the war might be out of sight, it's just a three- hour flight from Paris.

“We can actually do something about it, and alleviate some of that suffering and pain,” he added of donating funds to Women's March, which directly helps families on the ground.

Abegg also called on fashion companies to do more, particular­ly donate items including blankets and coats to help people get through the winter.

Eighteen images were available Wednesday night, with others available upon request. As for the timing of the event falling outside of fashion week, he added: “I wanted to do it as soon as possible because they need help now, not tomorrow, not next month.”

The style is a departure from Abegg's cinematic fashion photograph­y, with the portraits raw and unflinchin­g. Abegg shot on film and all prints are handmade on silver gelatin using traditiona­l darkroom techniques.

“It's an old-fashioned way of doing things. I wanted it to be very real and not faked,” he said, noting that there is no retouching. “I wanted it to be imperfect to actually see the beauty of who they are.”

 ?? ?? Pasha Harulia's portrait featured in “Models for Ukraine.”
Pasha Harulia's portrait featured in “Models for Ukraine.”

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