Finished mural. Photo © Amos Chapple

Since March this year the ongoing project ArtUnitedUs has collaborated with artist from around the globe with one mission, to raise public awareness and attention to the problem of war, aggression and violence, bringing instead a message of love and reconciliation.

With this idea in mind Australian artist Guido van Helten completed a couple of days ago a large-scale mural in Avdiyivka, an eastern Ukrainian town where fighting between Russia-backed separatists and government troops still takes place 2 1/2 years after the start of a conflict that has killed more than 9,600 people.

The mural features the portrait of Marina Marchenko, a 73-year-old teacher, photographed by van Helten shortly after his arrival in Avdiyivka.  Never being in a conflict zone before, Guido van Helten spent two days wearing a bulletproof vest and helmet working on the wall he had chosen, a wall facing the front lines and therefore visible to separatist snipers. It wasn’t an easy assignment, on both days van Helten worked on the mural, the boom of mortars and rattle of machine-gun fire were present, specially during the late afternoon, so was the insecurity that something could go wrong. But the wish of giving something to the people who lived there was stronger, the wish of bringing some joy to them.
“These people have probably never seen anything like this…. If I can give them something to think about that isn’t war — even for a moment, then it’s worth it.”
– Guido van Helten

Without making a formal statement, Van Helten’s mural, organised by ArtUnitedUs and curated by Geo Leros and Iryna Kanishcheva, sends a strong message, not just to the people in both sides of Avdiyivka, but also to the world.

Guido van Helten:
Part visual artist, part anthropologist, Guido Van Helten, 29, is an Australian contemporary artist dedicated to paint large-scale, site-specific mural works. His subjects are watercoloured and sepia toned, like old photographs that speak of the history and stories of the places he visits.

Photos and background information by photo journalist Amos Chapple
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Author: Fran

Founder and editor of Urbanite. Street Art lover who after the finishing her MA thesis on the Mexican and Norwegian muralist movement in the 1920-50s, developed a fascination for street art and graffiti that eventually led to collaborations with different art blogs, including the creation of this one.