The Polygon Gallery will host Elegy of Living Voices on April 27 at 7 pm at the Seaspan Pavilion, featuring the presentation of a short documentary film and photography by Ukranian artist Liliya Syvytska. A talkback and Q&A with Syvytska will be held at 7:30 pm.
Elegy of Living Voices is a 15-minute documentary that follows life in Ukrainian villages, as residents adapt to a new reality after liberation from Russian occupation.
On March 3, 2022, Russian troops entered the village of Yahidne in the Chernihiv region of Ukraine, and kept an entire community of 367 people—including more than 70 children—in a small school basement. As a result, 11 people died.
For a month, residents lived in horrific conditions, without food, clean water, or fresh air, sleeping on a concrete floor next to the corpses that they were not allowed to remove and bury.
The constant shelling and bombing of neighbouring territories yielded destroyed households; mined gardens and fields; and left rubble in place of cultural centres, schools, and churches. Local communities have embraced help from volunteers to rebuild their houses from the ruins, and share moments of joy and music despite the grim reality.