Kostiantyn Doroshenko

He is a columnist to company Public Culture; is a curator of the Research Platform PinchukArtCentre since 2019; and is the author of the books 'The End of the Late Iron Age' and 'Aria of Mary'.

His articles are published in Vil`na Dumka, Fakty i Kommentarii, Dzerkalo Tyzhnia, Den, Finansovaya Ukraina, Publichnye liudi, Kapital, Ptyuch, and others.

Exhibition of portraits of Crimean Tatar khans, recreated by artist and icon painter Yuri Nikitin in collaboration with historian Oleksa Haivoronsky.

In the final fashion show Olga Gromova's special collection of clothes created in the style of architectural bionics was burnt in front of the audience of 280 Kyiv and foreign VIPs.

At the exhibition, 43 artists from Ukraine and Russia presented a metaphor of modernity, an image of the protesting and confused world in a state of momenary calm.

The project is dedicated to the 100th anniversary of the restoration of Lithuanian statehood and combines works by artists of different genres and generations from Lithuania and Ukraine.

[17] 2018 – "Roma – are us", curated by Kostiantyn Doroshenko and Kateryna Lypa in Kyiv City History Museum, artist - Oleksiy Zinchenko.

[18] 2019 – "Human Condition" - Kyiv, Set Gallery, an exhibition by Swiss artist Marianne Hollenstein on the book Hannah Arendt and her opinion: " Everything a person knows or feels only makes sense to the extent that it can be expressed in language", with excerpts from the writer's letters to Martin Heidegger and memoirs of Holocaust.

[20] 2021 – "Time Not Lost", Prymorsk, -curator of the 15th season of the International Symposium of Contemporary Art - Biruchiy 021 which brought together 20 artists from different parts of Ukraine, Belarus, and Spain.

Analyzing the artist's gesture, Doroshenko remarked: "Imperial totalitarian society puts art on a pedestal as something that rises above life and directs it… Psychodarwinism; a proposal to abandon elitism and hierarchies".

[26] In an interview with Voice of America Doroshenko said: "Today we see that Ukrainian culture speaks to the world in a modern language, not just offering embroidered shirts and dumplings, according to a template created for it under Stalin ... Why did the Russians abandon democracy?

It is a neo-Nazi ideology: it has a specific totalitarian leader, it incorporates and uses chauvinistic, fascist, racist, xenophobic ideas in its rhetoric and politics.

Its goal is the same as that of Hitler's National Socialist teachings… This ideology must be condemned by the world community and legally banned as neo-Nazi, totalitarian and extremist.

"[28] During the war, Konstantin has remained in his native city of Kyiv and supports artists who create and protect the cultural heritage of Ukraine.