Wybrzeże Kościuszkowskie 22
Warsaw
Opening Hours:
Wednesday to Sunday 12:00–19:00
The Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw
october 23 13:30
Warsaw, Poland: Museum Forum: Ukrainian Museums In the War Between russia and Ukraine: Professionalism, Cooperation, Solidarity
Curated by Olha Honchar

Program
Welcoming remarks Joanna Mytkowska, Director of the Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw Olha Honchar, Director of the Territory of Terror Memorial Museum in Lviv Dr Piotr Rypson, Head of ICOM Polska
10:00–10:15
Olha Honchar, introduction and presentation of the speakers
10:15–10:45
Milena Chorna, Museum of War During the War: Managing the Unmanageable
10:45–11:15
Olesia Milovanova, Experience of Double Evacuation and Restoration of a Museum During the War: What Happens to Museums Under Occupation?
11:15–11:45
Break: 15 min.
Olena Mykhailovska, Social and Cultural Spaces as a Response to War: The case of Khmelnytskyi Regional Art Museum and XOXM Art_Hub
12:00–12:30
Yevheniia Kaluhina, Military Evacuation of Museums: Personal Story and Experience
12:30–13:00
Break: 15 min.
Ivanna Kyliushyk, Response of Polish Institutions to the War in Ukraine
13:15–13:45
Discussion
13:45–14:15
Lunch break: 14:15–15:30
Olha Honchar, introduction and presentation of the speakers
15:30–15:45
Olha Soshnikova, Report on the Activities of the M.F. Sumtsov Kharkiv Historical Museum During the War
15:45–16:15
Yuliia Pischanska, Experience of Organizing the Work of a Museum in the Context of War in Dnipro
16:15–16:45
Break: 15 min.
Olha Salo, Culture and War: Building Resilience
17:00–17:30
Liudmyla Mishchenko, Experience of Rescuing the Okhtyrka Collection and International Funding Activities
17:30–18:00
Break: 30 min.
Museum Lectures on the War in Ukraine. Debate on the Lessons Learnt from the War in Ukraine Considering the Safety of Cultural Heritage and Collections in Poland Participants: Dr. Paulina Florianowicz, Dr. Katarzyna Góralczyk, Dr. hub. Marta Szuniewicz-Stępień, Moderator: Dr. Piotr Rypson
18:30–20:00
Dinner
20:00
Languages: Ukrainian and Polish with simultaneous translation Event partners: L’Internationale, ICOM Polska Description: The fifth edition of Kyiv Biennial will be international and will take place in Kyiv, Ivano-Frankivsk, Uzhhorod, Vienna, Warsaw, Lublin and Berlin. It is conceived as a European event, with dispersed exhibitions and public programs in a number of Ukrainian and EU cities, and realized in partnership with leading European institutions in the field of contemporary art. The upcoming Biennial aims at reintegrating the Ukrainian artistic community, divided and scattered throughout Europe by the war, in order to empower its actors to work and reflect collectively and together with international colleagues on cultural, social and environmental challenges Ukraine is currently facing and to imagine scenarios for an emancipatory future within a global context. The Museum Forum is a space for exchange of ideas and experiences between Polish and Ukrainian museum workers. During the conference, museum representatives from Lviv, Kyiv, Kharkiv, Dnipro, Sloviansk, Starobilsk, Okhtyrka, and Khmelnytskyi will present their activities in wartime. The aim of the meeting is to share knowledge and experience of functioning during the war and to discuss with the Polish museological community what form international museology can take after the Russian genocide in Ukraine, how the war changed the perception of contemporary museology and the need to document current events, and how it affected the functioning of Polish museums. Despite the enormous damage and the ongoing invasion, Ukrainian museums and museologists have not stopped working: they are evacuating collections, accepting collections from other sites, and providing shelter for the staff of institutions located in Ukrainian regions under threat of direct hostilities. Considering the challenges of wartime, they are reorganizing the way they operate, which often means working without electricity, being faced with ongoing hostilities, working with the displaced people, documenting war crimes, cooperating with the army, digitalizing heritage to preserve and protect it, creating Ukrainian and international networks of cooperation, and seeking funds to support museums beyond the state funding. According to official government information, as of March 25, 2023, 1,373 cultural infrastructure facilities were damaged as a result of the Russian invasion; almost a third of them were destroyed, including 69 museums and galleries. Almost the entire territory of Luhansk and significant parts of Kherson, Zaporizhzhia, and Donetsk regions remain under temporary occupation. That is why, the number of cultural infrastructure facilities damaged as a result of the hostilities is impossible to estimate. The unprecedented experience of documenting war, which Ukrainian museum workers had to undertake without prior training, has completely changed museum practice and resulted in the development of functional protocols and security recommendations for potentially and actually threatened institutions. Given the often unpredictable course of events and the fact that more than 20 wars are currently underway in different parts of the world, this knowledge and practice is of exceptional value to the international museum community. Participants: Milena Chorna, National Museum of the History of Ukraine in the Second World War (Kyiv) Dr. Paulina Florjanowicz, Director of National Institute for Museums and Public Collections (Warsaw) Dr. Katarzyna Góralczyk, Director of the Institute of Heritage Protection (Krakow) Olha Honchar, Director of the Territory of Terror Memorial Museum in Lviv, initiator of the Museum Crisis Center (Lviv), co-founder of the New Museum NGO and the Cultural Heritage Fund of Ukraine. Yevheniia Kaluhina, Director of the Sloviansk Museum of Local Lore (evacuated) Ivanna Kyliushyk, Coordinator at the Meeting Centre at Ukrainian House (Warsaw) Olesia Milovanova, Director of the Luhansk Regional Museum of Local Lore (twice-evacuated, Luhansk–Starobilsk–Lviv) Liudmyla Mishchenko, Director of the Okhtyrka Museum of Local Lore Olena Mykhailovska, Director of the Khmelnytskyi Regional Art Museum Yuliia Pischanska, Director of the Dmytro Yavornytskyi National Historical Museum in Dnipro Dr. Piotr Rypson, Chairman of the Polish National Committee of the International Council of Museums (ICOM Poland) Olha Salo, Deputy Director General of the National Museum of the Revolution of Dignity (Kyiv), Project Coordinator at the Centre for the Rescue of Cultural Heritage (Kyiv) Olha Soshnikova, Director of the M.F. Sumtsov Kharkiv Historical Museum Dr. hab. Marta Szuniewicz-Stępień, Professor at the Westerplatte Naval Academy, Department of Command and Naval Operations Co-funded by the European Union The event is funded by EU funds. The views and opinions expressed are solely those of the author or authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the European Executive Agency for Education and Culture (EACEA). Neither the European Union nor EACEA can be held responsible for them.