Portrait of Wounded Ukrainian Woman Launches a Movement

“First Face of War,” a portrait of a woman badly wounded during a Russian military attack in Ukraine, has become an image that encapsulates the calamity of war.

Zhenya Gershman, a Russian-born American artist, was inspired by a photograph by Wolfgang Schwan that was taken after the 52-year-old Ukrainian teacher survived a bombing by Russian forces in Kharkiv. Although she survived, her home was completely destroyed.

“It began by an impulsive desire to do a painting that would reflect how I felt about the war and share it with the world,” Gershman told The Moscow Times.

The  oil painting “First Face of War” depicts a woman with bandaged head, face covered in blood, and dark blue eyes that look out directly at the viewer.

Zhenya Gershman, who is the granddaughter of the famous Soviet poet Mikhail Matusovsky — author of the lyrics to “Moscow Nights”— usually paints dramatic, monumental portraits. “Face of War,” however, is only 14 X 11 inches (35 x 28 cm).

“The smaller the painting, the closer you want to come towards it.”

Gershman’s goal is for people to look at the portrait for as long as it takes to understand the enormity of what is happening in Ukraine.

“The longer they look, the deeper they feel.”

Gershman said that Kurilo’s portrait was “painted with oil and tears on canvas” because she was crying almost the entire time she was painting.

“Face of War” isn’t the first time Gershman has spoken out against Russia’s political regime and its victims through her art. The portrait came right after she finished a series dedicated to political prisoner and opposition leader Alexei Navalny.

As a Russian emigree and artist, Gershman feels proud of the richness of Russian culture and embarrassed by its politics. Yet she believes that art and culture can prevail over dictatorships.

After “First Face of War” was sold at the Heritage Auctions to benefit Ukraine, Gershman launched an art movement called Brushes over Bullets in which she could use her “brush against the war.”

“It was amazing to see that a small, little, tiny canvas can literally raise money to put bandages on thousands of people and heal thousands of people.”

Through Brushes Over Bullets, Gershman wants to encourage people to create and share their art to demonstrate how many international artists stand with Ukraine.

“We will win.”

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