UAPP Logo
У вогні та руїнах: наслідки підступних російських ударів по Києву, Дніпру, Одесі й не тільки
Українські міста знову опинилися під прицілом нещадних ворожих обстрілів. Жорстоких атак зазнали містечка в прикордонних і прифронтових регіонах: Конотоп і Балаклія постраждали від масованої атаки дронів, Прилуки — від балістичного удару. Російська авіація тероризувала Краматорськ і Дружківку, Херсонщина жила під цілодобовим дроновим терором. Важким був тиждень для жителів Дніпровщини й Одещини через регулярні ворожі обстріли вдень і вночі. Ніч проти 24 травня у Києві та області росіяни перетворили на справжнє випробування — комбінована атака ракетами й БпЛА принесла багато руйнувань, вогню й забрала життя мирних людей.
read more
У вогні та руїнах: наслідки підступних російських ударів по Києву, Дніпру, Одесі й не тільки
Українські міста знову опинилися під прицілом нещадних ворожих обстрілів. Жорстоких атак зазнали містечка в прикордонних і прифронтових регіонах: Конотоп і Балаклія постраждали від масованої атаки дронів, Прилуки — від балістичного удару. Російська авіація тероризувала Краматорськ і Дружківку, Херсонщина жила під цілодобовим дроновим терором. Важким був тиждень для жителів Дніпровщини й Одещини через регулярні ворожі обстріли вдень і вночі. Ніч проти 24 травня у Києві та області росіяни перетворили на справжнє випробування — комбінована атака ракетами й БпЛА принесла багато руйнувань, вогню й забрала життя мирних людей.
read more
Kyiv in mourning, new attacks on Odesa and Kharkiv: weekly summary after a three‑day lull
After the partial three‑day lull ended, Russia launched over 3,170 attack drones, more than 1,300 guided aerial bombs, and 74 missiles of various types against Ukraine during the week. The strikes killed 52 people and injured 346, including 22 children. In Kyiv, a missile destroyed the entrance of a residential building, killing 24 people under the rubble, among them three children. A significant portion of the attacks targeted railway and port facilities. In frontline Kherson, Russian forces deliberately struck humanitarian missions and volunteers: vehicles of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, World Central Kitchen, and the NGO “Iskra Dobro” were attacked.
read more
Russian fakes and narratives about Chornobyl: from the disaster to the present
Four decades ago, the criminal negligence of the Soviet leadership led to the largest technological disaster in human history. Both during the USSR and today, the Kremlin exploits the tragedy at the Chornobyl Nuclear Power Plant as a tool of manipulation. Its mouthpieces attempt to absolve the system of responsibility for the accident: they blame the plant’s personnel, pose as “hostages of the regime and the KGB” alongside other affected countries, and openly lie about well‑known facts, labeling them as “Chornobyl myths.”
read more
“Continuity is the most important word in archiving,” said Ukrainian director and co‑founder of the War Archive
The War Archive has already collected about 37 million unique media files documenting Russia’s war against Ukraine. Founded by the NGO Docudays UA and the company Infoscope in March 2022, the initiative preserves a wide spectrum of materials that capture Russian war crimes, combat operations, and life during the war. The archive also includes interviews with eyewitnesses of wartime events, recorded by the War Archive team.
read more
Breaking News
News
This week, Russia continued its missile and drone terror against Ukrainian cities. Hundreds of Shahed-type UAVs and dozens of tactical missiles were launched every day — from the well-known Iskander missiles to the latest Grom-1 models.
·
This week, Russia continued its missile and drone terror against Ukrainian cities. Hundreds of Shahed-type UAVs and dozens of tactical missiles were launched every day — from the well-known Iskander missiles to the latest Grom-1 models.
·
News Stories
8.5.2025
This is some text inside of a div block.
“It doesn't matter which side is shooting.” How the Kremlin uses photo contests to spread propaganda around the world
While the world community cherishes illusions about Russian pacification, the Russian army intensifies attacks on Ukrainian cities. With the start of negotiations in which the United States brought Russia back into dialogue, the Kremlin is using this opportunity to spread its “truth” about the war.
News Stories
8.5.2025
“It doesn't matter which side is shooting.” How the Kremlin uses photo contests to spread propaganda around the world
While the world community cherishes illusions about Russian pacification, the Russian army intensifies attacks on Ukrainian cities. With the start of negotiations in which the United States brought Russia back into dialogue, the Kremlin is using this opportunity to spread its “truth” about the war.
News Stories
8.5.2025
This is some text inside of a div block.
How Russian propaganda tried to disrupt the Ukrainian Armed Forces' counteroffensive in Kharkiv in the spring of 2022 — photographic evidence from Ukrainian documentary filmmakers
Two months of full-scale war between Russia and Ukraine are behind us. The resistance shown by Kharkiv's defenders in the first days of the war showed the Russians that no one would surrender the city without a fight. Like Kyiv, the Russians planned to capture Kharkiv in three days. At least, this is what Russian prisoners have testified. Therefore, the enemy hoped to capture Kharkiv through information warfare and terror. Turning Kharkiv residents against the Armed Forces of Ukraine, forcing them to leave, and discrediting the city's defense and the struggle of the Ukrainian people as a whole were the goals that enemy propaganda sought to achieve in Kharkiv.
News Stories
8.5.2025
How Russian propaganda tried to disrupt the Ukrainian Armed Forces' counteroffensive in Kharkiv in the spring of 2022 — photographic evidence from Ukrainian documentary filmmakers
Two months of full-scale war between Russia and Ukraine are behind us. The resistance shown by Kharkiv's defenders in the first days of the war showed the Russians that no one would surrender the city without a fight. Like Kyiv, the Russians planned to capture Kharkiv in three days. At least, this is what Russian prisoners have testified. Therefore, the enemy hoped to capture Kharkiv through information warfare and terror. Turning Kharkiv residents against the Armed Forces of Ukraine, forcing them to leave, and discrediting the city's defense and the struggle of the Ukrainian people as a whole were the goals that enemy propaganda sought to achieve in Kharkiv.
Photo Stories
8.5.2025
This is some text inside of a div block.
“Where the Road Leads”: a documentary project by Max Chorny
We continue to introduce you to the finalists of our annual Grant Program to Support Documentary Photographers — an initiative implemented by UAPP with the support of the International Press Institute. Today — the project “Where the road will lead” by Max Chorny. It is a journey through Ukraine without routes and reservations — only the road, road trips, casual acquaintances, conversations that you do not plan, and portraits of people that remain in the memory forever. This is not an event report. It is a personal observation of how the country feels in the middle, in dialogue, in silence, in fatigue, in believing words and unbelieving views. Max's stories are not a claim to objectivity, but an attempt to catch the living warmth between the lines of the news, where the real begins.
Photo Stories
8.5.2025
“Where the Road Leads”: a documentary project by Max Chorny
We continue to introduce you to the finalists of our annual Grant Program to Support Documentary Photographers — an initiative implemented by UAPP with the support of the International Press Institute. Today — the project “Where the road will lead” by Max Chorny. It is a journey through Ukraine without routes and reservations — only the road, road trips, casual acquaintances, conversations that you do not plan, and portraits of people that remain in the memory forever. This is not an event report. It is a personal observation of how the country feels in the middle, in dialogue, in silence, in fatigue, in believing words and unbelieving views. Max's stories are not a claim to objectivity, but an attempt to catch the living warmth between the lines of the news, where the real begins.
Photo Stories
6.5.2025
This is some text inside of a div block.
“There is no justice, but it's nice to move towards it,” says photographer and sergeant of the 35th Separate Marine Brigade, Kostyantyn Guzenko.
Konstantin Guzenko is a photographer, media producer, member of the Ukrainner team and candidate for admission to UAPP. Today he serves in the 35th Separate Marine Brigade named after Rear Admiral Mikhail Ostrogradsky and serves as a pressofitzer. His pictures are of war without decoration: the view from the trench, from the rear of combat vehicles and from the dungeons where those who fight live.
Photo Stories
6.5.2025
“There is no justice, but it's nice to move towards it,” says photographer and sergeant of the 35th Separate Marine Brigade, Kostyantyn Guzenko.
Konstantin Guzenko is a photographer, media producer, member of the Ukrainner team and candidate for admission to UAPP. Today he serves in the 35th Separate Marine Brigade named after Rear Admiral Mikhail Ostrogradsky and serves as a pressofitzer. His pictures are of war without decoration: the view from the trench, from the rear of combat vehicles and from the dungeons where those who fight live.
News Stories
5.5.2025
This is some text inside of a div block.
Cities in flames: a photo chronicle of the shelling of Kharkiv, Odesa, and Zaporizhzhia
Massive drone attacks, ballistic missiles, dozens of wounded and dead civilians — from April 28 to May 2, Russia attacked at least nine Ukrainian cities. Residential areas, hospitals, and schools were once again targeted. Explosions were heard in Kharkiv, Odesa, Kyiv, Zaporizhzhia, Dnipro, Cherkasy, Kherson, and frontline communities. Children were injured, dozens of people were wounded, and critical infrastructure was destroyed.
News Stories
5.5.2025
Cities in flames: a photo chronicle of the shelling of Kharkiv, Odesa, and Zaporizhzhia
Massive drone attacks, ballistic missiles, dozens of wounded and dead civilians — from April 28 to May 2, Russia attacked at least nine Ukrainian cities. Residential areas, hospitals, and schools were once again targeted. Explosions were heard in Kharkiv, Odesa, Kyiv, Zaporizhzhia, Dnipro, Cherkasy, Kherson, and frontline communities. Children were injured, dozens of people were wounded, and critical infrastructure was destroyed.
Photo Stories
30.4.2025
This is some text inside of a div block.
10 photos of April
This April, despite the Easter holidays, the Russian army shelled Ukrainian cities, killing people, while Ukrainian photographers documented this horrific reality on a daily basis. The Ukrainian Association of Professional Photographers and Ukraїner present a joint monthly selection:
Photo Stories
30.4.2025
10 photos of April
This April, despite the Easter holidays, the Russian army shelled Ukrainian cities, killing people, while Ukrainian photographers documented this horrific reality on a daily basis. The Ukrainian Association of Professional Photographers and Ukraїner present a joint monthly selection:

Photo Stories

This section features the best images of the month, interviews with photographers, and in-depth visual stories. Discover compelling narratives and events through the lens of our talented authors.

Photo Stories
22.5.2026
Red zone for photographs within the red zone of war. Ambrotypes by Stanislav Ostrous from the city of Kherson
Photo Stories
8.5.2026
Faces of War. A photo archive of the Ukrainian experience of World War II
Photo Stories
4.5.2026
Diary of the Invasion. The photobook *100 Days of War* by Ihor Chekachkov
Photo Stories
1.5.2026
10 photos of April
Photo Stories
1.5.2026
Kherson, football, and friendship. A photo story by Ivan Antypenko about the girls’ team “Kristal”
Photo Stories
29.4.2026
“Beyond the Verdict” — a documentary project by Nadiia Karpova

Our partners

We tell the world about Ukraine through the prism of photography.

Join and support the community of Ukrainian photographers.

UAPP is an independent association of professional Ukrainian photographers, designed to protect their interests, support, develop and promote Ukrainian photography as an important element of national culture.

UAPP's activities span educational, social, research and cultural initiatives, as well as book publishing.

UAPP represents Ukrainian professional photography in the international photographic community and is an official member of the Federation of European Photographers (FEP) — an international organization representing more than 50,000 professional photographers in Europe and other countries around the world.

Support and join us
A couple of men walking across a grass covered field.