Medicine Hat News

‘Kind of a small miracle:’ Winnipeg-born actor at the helm of art auction for Ukraine

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Olena Kayinska was forced to put down her paintbrush at the end of February.

The Ukrainian artist was in the middle of a project when Russian troops invaded her country, prompting her to leave her studio and stay with her mother.

Thoughts of returning to art seemed like a luxury amid all the death and destructio­n, but the events also provided material for the project she had to unexpected­ly abandon six months ago.

Now, some of her pieces are among those featured in a global online auction coorganize­d by a former Winnipegge­r.

“In a mystical way, it’s very connected to the war,” Kayinska said in a phone interview from Lviv, Ukraine. The project titled “Trauma” explores the theme of recovery.

With her career in limbo, Kayinska knew she needed to do something that would not only occupy her time, but give her the ability to help her people. So she joined Doctors Without Borders as an interprete­r and project manager with the humanitari­an organizati­on.

“Psychologi­cally, it’s easier to overcome this fear and loss of war when you’re surrounded with people and when you are doing something useful,” she said.

Another calling, this time more in line with Kayinska’s roots, came in spring when members of FestivALT, a Krakow-based Jewish arts and activism organizati­on, reached out on social media to see if she wanted to be part of global art auction called Fight with Art.

Winnipeg-born actor and playwright Michael Rubenfeld, who now lives in Krakow, Poland, is co-director of the auction along with James Arellano, who is from California.

Rubenfeld got a close-up view of the war’s frightenin­g effects as many fleeing western Ukraine crossed over the border to seek refuge in Poland. He and his wife took in a Ukrainian woman and her mother soon after the invasion. Their home quickly filled with tourniquet­s, bandages and other supplies as the woman led efforts to collect supplies to distribute to the Ukrainian army.

It was clear the war’s effects didn’t end at the border and the art collective needed to pivot, said Rubenfeld.

“There was just so much news and so much noise about the war that we wanted to ensure that there was also a contributi­on of the human element, the cultural element to also keep people rooted in the fact that we’re dealing with humans,” he said.

The team came up with the idea to host an online global art auction to showcase and support Ukrainian artists whose careers had been halted, as well as financiall­y support charities assisting with war relief.

They were able to source more than 130 pieces of original artwork from roughly 40 artists across Ukraine.

It was no small feat. The team had to figure out how to get art out of a country at war.

They built a network of people to help. Their goal was to get everything to Lviv, in western Ukraine, where they had two storehouse­s. The art was then transporte­d by truck to Krakow. It took about two months to collect everything.

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