FLOWERS & TREES IN UKRAINIAN ART TALK

Shaped by nature purple and green logo

This event is in-person at the Museum in the Headley Lecture Theatre and online via Zoom

Tickets are £8 each

Booking is essential. Book below


With Dr Louise Hardiman, art historian and academic

Ukraine is known for its fertile steppe lands and a strong agricultural tradition; a deep respect for nature is encoded in Ukrainian national identity.

Building upon the tradition of folk art, images of flowers and trees appear often in art and design, including icon painting, embroidery, furniture, ceramics, and the decoration of buildings.

 

Embroidered Flower Motif

Mykola Samokysh, Motifs of Ukrainian Ornament, no. 1, 1902, embroidery with silk and gold. Chernihiv province. Archaeological exhibition of 1902 in Kharkiv

 

In this talk, Louise will explore works of art and craft from across the centuries, taking account of both local and western European influences. 

A key emphasis will be the cultural significance of plant imagery, including its folk meanings and its role in shaping Ukrainian nationhood.

Dr Louise Hardiman is an independent academic specialising in Russian and East European art. Her research and publications focus primarily on the 19th and 20th centuries, including the international Arts and Crafts movement, women’s art, landscape painting, and the history of British-Russian artistic exchange. She currently teaches and lectures on Ukrainian and Russian art in a variety of settings.


BOOKING

This event takes place in-person at the Museum, and online via Zoom

Tickets are £8 each. Booking is essential

BOOK YOUR IN-PERSON TICKET    BOOK YOUR ONLINE TICKET

If you have any questions, please email us at publicprogrammes@ashmus.ox.ac.uk