
"Knights of Light" exhibit launches in Paris, showcasing works by artists from Ukraine’s Army
The second part of the exhibition includes 13 paintings by Ukrainian artist, historian and ethnographer Volodymyr Patyk, an Ukrinform correspondent reports.
"The light of art has the power to unite even in the darkest times. The Knights of Light are our warriors. So this exhibition is not only about art. It is about strength of spirit, struggle, and indomitability. It’s about those who are currently on the front lines and have not lost touch with creativity, which is their way of telling the world about Ukraine,” Ukraine’s Ambassador to France Vadym Omelchenko said at the opening.
Svitlana Fomenko, the cultural center chief, said none of the artists defending the country could attend the opening ceremony but these soldiers recorded a video message directly from their bases.
“It is important for me to talk about friends, about People with a capital letter, who defended or are now defending our and your freedom. I dedicated my triptych to my friend Vovchyk. He did not walk back when the country called for help. He perished like a real man, up in arms. Vovchyk was cremated in Odesa. At that moment, I felt an existential void. Remember and be grateful to heroes, forever,” Bohdan Sokur said in his address.

The artist, whose creative output already included three personal exhibitions, returned to his homeland after Russia’s full-scale invasion to join the ranks of the Armed Forces.
The exhibition also features works by Danylo Skliarov, who began painting in 2020, while in active military service.
Roman Khrushch, a painter and monumental artist, worked his way up from an infantryman to a squad commander and chief sergeant at an assault platoon as part of the Azov-Kyiv Special Operations Forces unit. In June 2023, he was seriously wounded. After rehabilitation, he rejoined his unit as an instructor.
“Remember in which house your roots are. Your house is your place of origin. A place where you can always go back to gain strength. A place that the enemy seeks to destroy to cut off your roots and ties with your Homeland. But if you fight for your home, you will save it and, in the end, either alive or dead, you will go back Home,” Khrushshch wrote in the caption to his work.
Another artist whose works are presented in Paris is Vitaliy Haidar. Since the full-scale invasion, he has been fighting in the ranks of the 71st Separate Jaeger Brigade of the Airborne Assault Troops, never stopping to create artworks.
The opening of the “Knights of Light” saw representatives from international organizations and the diplomatic corps, including from Malta, Georgia, Germany, and Sweden. Government officials and French patrons, such as the French Rotary Club, also attended the event.
The works by Volodymyr Patyk, a Lviv-based artist and Shevchenko Prize laureate, were brought to Paris by his daughter Oksana. The Patyk Museum, which recently opened in Lviv, is the only non-private museum that was launched during a full-scale war. The Honorary Consul of France in Lviv, Pavlo Yarema, helped transport the artist's valuable works.
The Knights of Light exhibition will later go on a tour across France’s regions.
As Ukrinform reported earlier, a museum of Ukrainian artist and Shevchenko Prize laureate Volodymyr Patyk has opened in Lviv.