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Artist unveils suitcase sculpture to highlight plight of refugees

The sculpture will be on display in Edinburgh during August.

Lucinda Cameron
Monday 08 August 2022 07:46 EDT
Artist Kostya Benkovich with his sculpture The Suitcase (Jane Barlow/PA)
Artist Kostya Benkovich with his sculpture The Suitcase (Jane Barlow/PA) (PA Wire)

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An artist who fled Russia because of his anti-war stance has unveiled a sculpture of a suitcase at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe to highlight the plight of refugees.

The artwork by Kostya Benkovich is a cage-like object, constructed of reinforced steel which is also used to make prison bars in Russia.

He was inspired to create it after speaking with refugees who had fled Ukraine including one woman who told him: “My suitcase is all I have remaining of my former life.”

It will be on show at the Assembly Gardens in George Street, Edinburgh, until August 29.

I had to flee Russia myself and have, to a certain extent, become an object of my own work because the suitcase is all I now have that connects me to the past

Kostya Benkovich, artist

Mr Benkovich, who fled Russia in March, said: “The theme of the absence, or restriction of freedoms, and the recognition of the victims of state repression reoccur in my work.

“I had to flee Russia myself and have, to a certain extent, become an object of my own work because the suitcase is all I now have that connects me to the past.”

The Russian-born artist hopes The Suitcase stands as a tribute to the plight of refugees.

The artwork will be free to see, however, viewers will be invited to support humanitarian relief for refugees who have arrived in the UK by donating to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) in the UK via a QR code on the sculpture’s plinth.

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