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Motion

2025

Acrylic on polyvinyl chloride fabric, public work at Kyiv Central Train Station, Kyiv, Ukraine

21x12 m (69’x39’)

Created for Kyiv’s Central Railway Station and commissioned by the PinchukArtCentre, Kyiv, Ukraine. The work composition reflects the architecture of the station (the large rolling stairs) while presenting an abstracted image of Ukrainian society, depicted as a continuous collective movement of people.

Euronews

BBC

THE ART NEWSPAPER

Vogue UA

Ukr Pravda

Lesia Khomenko, “Motion”, 2025, commissioned by PinchukArtCentre in partnership with Ukrainian Railways. © Photo Ela Bialkowska, OKNO Studio
Lesia Khomenko, “Motion”, 2025, commissioned by PinchukArtCentre in partnership with Ukrainian Railways. © Photo Ela Bialkowska, OKNO Studio
Lesia Khomenko, “Motion”, 2025, commissioned by PinchukArtCentre in partnership with Ukrainian Railways. © Photo Ela Bialkowska, OKNO Studio
Lesia Khomenko, “Motion”, 2025, commissioned by PinchukArtCentre in partnership with Ukrainian Railways. © Photo Ela Bialkowska, OKNO Studio

Khomenko has turned the main hall of Kyiv-Pasazhyrskyi train station into her temporary studio, creating a 21-by-12 metre painting that mirrors the movement and spirit of a nation fighting for its survival. 

Installed in partnership with Ukrainian Railways, the work marks a bold return to public art for the artist and arrives just ahead of her upcoming solo exhibition at the PinchukArtCentre, opening 28 August. 

“The Central Train Station in Kyiv is a very emotional place for everyone whose life dramatically changed through the full-scale invasion of Russia into Ukraine,” Khomenko tells Euronews Culture. “Every day I see a lot of families and injured soldiers here. I also break into tears when I arrive or leave Kyiv. It's very difficult to stay a critical artist in such a public place.” 

The vast composition depicts an ascending escalator filled with blurred figures – soldiers, railway workers, medics, war photographers – all based on real people who took part in a photoshoot for the piece. Khomenko says their movement symbolises collective effort, history in motion, and the near-impossibility of fully understanding a moment while still living within it. 

“The motion effect turns the group of people into a united body that looks quite abstract with no clear boundaries,” she says. “It’s about time and the impossibility to capture the historical moment while being inside the moment.” 

The painting greets travellers as they descend into the hall from the station escalators, with giant chandeliers partly obscuring their first view before the full image is revealed – transforming a journey (whether it be an everyday commute, or perhaps a longer journey into Ukraine) into a quiet act of reflection.

“I imagine passengers who have just arrived in Kyiv and stepped on the escalator... I think it could be interesting. I’m expecting that passengers could project depicted characters on themself: ‘Wow, it could be me!’” 

Though its unveiling coincides with Independence Day, Khomenko notes the timing was a “lucky coincidence” – but one that brings meaningful resonance. The work is part of a special public commission linked to her upcoming solo exhibition at the PinchukArtCentre, opening 28 August. 

“I was dreaming about such an opportunity for a while,” she tells Euronews Culture. “I think that institutional space is very safe for any kind of artistic gesture. But in a public space, the artwork is facing real life and becomes part of the architecture.” 

Björn Geldhof, artistic director of the PinchukArtCentre, says the station work expands Khomenko’s practice beyond the gallery, building on Ukraine’s rich – but ideologically fraught – tradition of public art

“Khomenko’s temporal installation consciously engages with this tradition while simultaneously rejecting its ideological past,” he explains. “This monumental work engages directly with broad audiences. It depicts an abstract portrayal of Ukrainian society in a continued and unified motion, defending itself from the outside while protecting its fundamental democratic values."

(...)

Lesia Khomenko working on “Motion”, 2025, commissioned by PinchukArtCentre in partnership with Ukrainian Railways. Photo courtesy of the press office of Ukrainian Railways
Lesia Khomenko working on “Motion”, 2025, commissioned by PinchukArtCentre in partnership with Ukrainian Railways. Photo courtesy Vogue Ukraine
Lesia Khomenko working on “Motion”, 2025, commissioned by PinchukArtCentre in partnership with Ukrainian Railways. Photo courtesy Vogue Ukraine
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