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НАШЕ ЖИТТЯ • Листопад 2025 31 Visit The Ukrainian Museum Shop during Museum opening hours, Wednesday–Sunday from noon to 6:00 p.m. (222 East 6th Street, New York, NY 10003) or shop online anytime from anywhere: shop.theukrainianmuseum.org Yara Litosch created this triple- strand necklace with a large Ukrainian brass cross, magenta- dyed jade, ruby-green zoisite beads, 12 Czech green cathe- dral beads, and teardrop garnet red Czech glass beads — a truly unique item and one of many offered by the Shop from this arti- san and long-time UM vendor. Artist Tania Snihur handcrafts a variety of silver and gold-filled wires into unique sculptural shapes such as these earrings, often adding semi-precious stones such as coral, garnet, and amber. Ukrainian-born artist Olena Labunka is inspired to design stylized Ukrainian necklaces, “namysta,” like this single strand of glass beads with a “Pokrova” Ukrainian pendant and metal and brass findings. Nina Lapchyk’s use of red coral beads builds on the age-old Ukraini- an belief that these necklaces were endowed with magical powers: bright red beads meant that a woman was strong and healthy. Shown here is the artisan’s 34” extra-large coral barrel bead necklace with silver spacers and adjustable silver closing. Between 2020 and 2023, the Old Khata Project travelled to nearly 100 villages across Ukraine — many of them now under russian occupation — to document, via photographs and interviews, the country’s folk history and architecture, now being eroded by time and war. The visual storytelling in the resulting KůĚ <ŚĂƚĂ ŽŽŬ delves into broader topics such as how Ukrainians perceive home, beauty, life, and death. In Ukrainian with English translations.
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