BEFORE THE WAR STARTED

November 30, 2024
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January 2022: a fragile calm, heavy with something unspoken. These photographs reflect the quiet tension that seemed to linger everywhere—a sense that life was holding its breath before everything changed.
BEFORE THE WAR STARTED

Today, I often find myself marking time with the phrase, “before the war started.” It has become a way to make sense of a world divided into two: before and after. For most of my life, I didn’t fully understand what war could mean—not for my country and certainly not for me.

But in the winter of 2022, I began to feel it. In January, I came to Kyiv, and something about the city felt different. The streets, the snow, the shadows—it all seemed to carry a quiet warning. I walked through the city with my camera, capturing moments that felt both ordinary and heavy, as though the city was holding its breath.

This series, shot on black-and-white film, is my record of those days. It’s not just about Kyiv in January 2022; it’s about how the world looked and felt before everything changed.

Today, I often find myself marking time with the phrase, “before the war started.” It has become a way to make sense of a world divided into two: before and after. For most of my life, I didn’t fully understand what war could mean—not for my country and certainly not for me.

But in the winter of 2022, I began to feel it. In January, I came to Kyiv, and something about the city felt different. The streets, the snow, the shadows—it all seemed to carry a quiet warning. I walked through the city with my camera, capturing moments that felt both ordinary and heavy, as though the city was holding its breath.

This series, shot on black-and-white film, is my record of those days. It’s not just about Kyiv in January 2022; it’s about how the world looked and felt before everything changed.

Kyiv, January, 2022