
The
Artist
Anna Perepechai
Lives and Works in
Potsdam
ANNA PEREPECHAI (1989, Poltava, UA) is a visual artist and photographer who has been living and working in Germany and Ukraine since 2014. From a migrant perspective, she investigates how colonial and imperial violence inscribes itself into landscapes, bodies, and, everyday objects, particularly in the context of formerly Sovietized societies. Central themes of her work include
witnessing, memory, and states of temporal and emotional incompleteness. Her practice combines documentary and subjective approaches, cameraless and lens-based photography, writing, and archival materials.
Projects
2025
Tears of Things
″Tears of Things″ is a multimedia body of work reflecting on the Russian war against Ukraine from the artist’s personal perspective. As a Ukrainian migrant living in Germany—where she arrived as a volunteer in 2014 and unexpectedly remained—the artist weaves memories, losses, and observations into an exploration of war, migration, and resistance. The project is rooted in Perepechai’s home region of Chernihiv, bordering Russia and Belarus, which has been under constant threat since 2014. The full-scale invasion in 2022 directly affected her family, and experiences of occupation and loss continue to shape the work. ″Tears of Things″ brings together photography, text, video, and material-based practices. It addresses grief and fragmentation alongside resistance, care, and memory work, combining documentary observation with experimental forms
to bridge past, present, and an uncertain future. Within this submission, several projects from ″Tears of Things″ are presented, including the eponymous installation with which the body of work began.
Anna Perepechai
was nominated by
Triennial of Photography | Deichtorhallen
in
Show all projects
Each year every member of the FUTURES European Photography Platform nominates a set of artists and projects to become part of the FUTURES network.
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I’ve always loved photography, even if it sounds like a cliche. The first photos I took, I did without knowing how to do that, without paying any attention to framing, subject or composition. After a while, I began to understand what is happening in the space between me as a photographer and the subject I was photographing. And many years later, I also understood why I love to photograph. To communicate. A message, a concept, an emotion.
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