
Smoldering. Tree of Life
A story about Ukrainian monumental art of the Soviet period in Mariupol. Photographer Stanislav Ivanov lived in Mariupol all his life. He studied history, streets, houses, monumental art. Some of the mosaics are more than half a century old. The "Tree of Life" panel - created by a team of artists led by Alla Gorska and Viktor Zaretsky - was bricked up after the death of the artist and reopened in 2008. This and other stories were collected by Stanislav Ivanov and art critic Oleksandr Chernov in the album "All Shades of Mariupol Mosaics". After February 24, 2022, the mosaicists, like hundreds of thousands of residents of Mariupol, became hostages of the occupying forces of the Russian Federation. In the film, we are transported to peaceful Mariupol in December 2021 and, together with Stanislav, explore the city and its mosaics, transported to a place where time and the elements seemed to be the greatest threats.
You may like

Territory of Empty Windows

The Return of Ivan

20 Days in Mariupol

Out from the Ashes

Mariupolis

Mariupolis 2

Fight for Ukraine

Why I'm Alive

FOX 25th Anniversary Special

My Way: The Rise and Fall of Silvio Berlusconi

Beard, Hair & Stache

Deus

Rise Up: The legacy of Nat Turner

Whore

Tatame

A Lizard Under the Skin

Pulse

Naqoyqatsi

Our Planet: Behind the Scenes

Night Will Fall

My Mom Jayne

The Class of ‘92

As I Was Moving Ahead, Occasionally I Saw Brief Glimpses of Beauty

Heart of a Dog