Free entry
Film Screenings as part of the "Looking into the Gaps II" exhibition
As part of the "Looking into the Gaps II" exhibition, a series of screenings will be held at the DCCC Cinema.
August 13, 6:30 PM
— "Labor Safety in the Dnipro Region" (2018). Revkovskyi/Rachynskyi
A film compiled from a selection of videos gathered on social media. They document violations of safety regulations at enterprises and conversations between workers, which are interwoven with unexpected moments of humor and humanity.
— "Rattling, Thumping, Arguing, and Gurgling" (2021). Revkovskyi/Rachynskyi
This video is part of "The Tailings" project. The work addresses the theme of human responsibility for Earth's resources and the bizarre forms that traces of human civilization can take.
August 20, 6:30 PM
— "The Sky. The Invasion" (2022). Revkovskyi/Rachynskyi
This video work shows the fragility of the sky and the fear of looking at it, which is characteristic of people with traumatic experiences. The selection of shots depicts the sky throughout a daily cycle: morning, day, evening, night, and morning. This is the sky over Ukraine in different places before and during the war.
— "Civilians. The Invasion" (2023–2024). Revkovskyi/Rachynskyi
A film made from amateur videos that documents the experience of Ukrainians surviving Russian aggression. The video work is structured according to a specific narrative: starting with the realization that the full-scale invasion had begun and how to survive it; the risks civilians face during combat; and even the moments of death of some of the people filmed, and what happens to civilians after death.
September 3, 6:30 PM
— "Flooding" (2023). Nikita Kadan, Alona Karavai, Yarema Malashchuk and Roman Khimey, Harry Kraievets
The work is based on an immersion into the urban lake of Ivano-Frankivsk, through which not only the landscape but also the city's traumatic memory emerges. The starting point was the events of October 12, 1941, known as "Bloody Sunday"—the mass shooting of Jewish residents of Ivano-Frankivsk during the Nazi occupation.
— "Lemberg Machine" (2023). Dana Kavelina
A feature-length animated film dedicated to the tragic history of Lviv during the Nazi occupation. At the center of the narrative is a fantastic machine capable of transmitting voices from the past and the afterlife, showing strange, frightening, yet deeply poetic scenes that retell stories of war, revolution, utopia, repentance, and the fate of the universe.
September 10, 6:30 PM
— "Odesa. Fragment 205" (2015). Andrii Sylvestrov, Yurii Leiderman
Part of "The Birmingham Ornament" project. The video focuses on the history of modern Odesa and its inhabitants, portraying them through a complex web of social, historical, political, and cultural aspects.
— "What Will You Do If the War Continues?" (2025). Vladyslav Plisetskyi
The film explores how a protracted war changes society, political narratives, and personal reality. Through the author's own biography, performances, dialogue with his father, and the transformations of the Ukrainian queer community, the film shows a clash of identities, cultures, and ideologies.
Admission is by free donation, with prior registration required via the link.
The screenings will be held every Wednesday, with a short break between films. The selection of films was curated by Nikita Kadan, the curator of the "Looking into the Gaps II" exhibition.
The "Looking into the Gaps" exhibition project was initiated by Voloshyn Gallery in 2024. At Artsvit Gallery and the Dnipro Center for Contemporary Culture, the exhibition is realized in partnership with Voloshyn Gallery (Kyiv) and Asortymenna Kimnata (Ivano-Frankivsk).