The Mystetskyi Arsenal is a unique museum of contemporary art located in Kyiv. Founded in 2005, it is dedicated to showcasing and promoting contemporary Ukrainian and international artistic trends. The museum's collection includes various forms of art such as paintings, sculptures, installations, photographs, video art, and more.
The Mystetskyi Arsenal is known for its diverse exhibition program, reflecting contemporary trends and issues in Ukrainian and global art. It hosts both solo exhibitions of well-known artists and collective projects that attract attention from both the general public and the expert community. The museum also actively collaborates with international art organizations and other cultural institutions to implement joint projects and exchange artistic experiences and ideas.
The Mystetskyi Arsenal is an important center of cultural life in Kyiv and Ukraine, hosting various events such as exhibitions, lectures, workshops, concerts, and other cultural activities. It attracts both local artists and cultural figures as well as an international audience, making it a significant cultural space in the...
Read moreI dare say that Mystetskyi Arsenal is the most inclusive, up-to-date and open major culture institution in Ukraine. Primarily, it is renown for its annually held Book Arsenal festival, which gathers virtually every publishing house and prolific writers in Ukraine, as well offering a large range of public discussion, artwork and exhibitions. The organisers have catered for modern needs and modernised the grounds. Besides, the outdoor facilities include music stage and food courts. Apart from the Book Arsenal, throughout a year the institution holds and endorses public exhibitions, political, social and art discussions and organises a bunch of theme-related events, for instance, Malevich's works...
Read moreI was there on the cold winter morning for several hours and went through the Revolutionize! exhibition, which was on display at that time. The exhibition was fine, done with taste and feeling. The staff was helpful and unobtrusive, there were other visitors, but they seemed thinly spread over the great expanse of the museum. Arsenal itself is very big and imposing. It's 19th century interiors curiously mesh with 21th century artefacts, but it's still hard to get rid of the feeling you are in the abandoned factory. It's very easy to get there - many buses end on the Lavra bus stop, and it's not far from Arsenalna metro station if you don't mind 10...
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