Victoria Lomasko

To create her work, Lomasko travels throughout the former Soviet Union and spends time with those who are rarely represented in the media.

[1] All the work that was created during the lessons was collected and is currently housed at the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía in Madrid.

[1] In 2010 Lomasko co-curated the art exhibition called Drawing the Court with Zlata Ponirovska at Gelabert Studios Gallery in New York.

The book is a 158-page documentary graphic novel that documents the legal trial of the organizers of the Forbidden Art 2006 exhibition that was held at Andrei Sakharov Museum in Moscow in 2007.

Around the same time, she collaborated with Nadia Plungian to curate The Feminist Pencil, an exhibit that showcased mostly Russian women's graphic art.

[16] Lomasko also created an exhibition titled The Daughter of an Artist Decorator which was displayed at The Arts Centre HOME in Manchester, UK.

It includes reports of the large opposition rallies that took place in Moscow in 2012 and the subsequent trials of protesters; the LGBT community's efforts to stay visible despite the government's adoption of homophobic laws; and protests by national and local grassroots "pressure groups" in 2015 and 2016.

[16] Lomasko also created an exhibition titled Our Post-Soviet Land which was displayed at Edith-Russ-Haus for Media Art, in Oldenburg, Germany.

In 2019 Lomasko created a collection of murals titled Atlases which was done at The Havighurst Center for Russian and Post-Soviet Studies, at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, USA.

Lomasko's work can also be found in public collections at the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía in Madrid, Spain; National Center of Contemporary Art in Moscow, Russia; the Arsenal Gallery in Bialystok, Poland, but also Manchester, Brescia, and Angoulême.

Victoria Lomasko in 2017