UFDA Expands Collection with Works by Yuliia Holub

Anna Cherevko

Anna Cherevko

March 19, 2026
2 min read

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The Ukrainian Fund of Digitized Art continues to grow! Recently, our team digitized 16 works by Ukrainian artist Yuliia Holub.

Yuliia Holub: Responding to Lived States 

Born in 2002, Yuliia studied Easel Painting at Mykhailo Boichuk Kyiv State Academy of Decorative-Applied Arts and Design (2019-2023). Later, in 2023-2024, Yuliia pursued a Master’s Program in Monumental Painting at the National Academy of Fine Arts and Architecture. 

Since 2022, Yuliia Holub’s paintings and graphic works have been showcased in numerous exhibitions, including “Tee Taidetta - Älä Sotaa” at Jyväskylä City Central Library in Jyväskylä (2022), “Art of the Young” at Lviv Palace of Arts in Lviv (2023), “The Time of Pre-Assigned Events” at Modern City Hub in Zaporizhzhia (2025), “Another Nearby” at Korsaks’ Museum in Lutsk (2025), “Nahirna. Wspólnota” at Ukrainian House in Warsaw (2026), among others.

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The Border. From the "Ur-Presence" Miniseries (2025) by Yuliia Holub. Painting, Watercolor, Paper, Watercolor pencils. Digitized by UFDA Studio

The artist’s works carry philosophical and esoteric undertones, yet are grounded solely in an exploration of subjectivity. Yuliia Holub’s original paintings include works from the “Impossibility Of Self” series, the “Ur-Presence” miniseries, the “Complex Empathy” miniseries, the "Postal Memory" series, and many more. 

Holub’s works from the "Postal Memory" series were created during the exile, when Yuliia was in Finland as a refugee. She used envelopes found at a flea market as her canvases. They are carriers of time, fragments of other people’s stories, broken-off letters that never arrived.

The “Impossibility Of Self” series approaches the mirror not as a means of self-knowledge, but as a structure of distortion and substitution. The reflection does not return the gaze; it replaces it, dissolving the boundary between the real and the simulated and leaving only traces of presence. The figure remains suspended — not a center, but a fragile threshold between reality and its projection.

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The Ophiuchus Transformation (2025) by Yuliia Holub. Painting, Acrylic, Oil, Canvas. Digitized by UFDA Studio

Yuliia Holub’s Art Style

Yuliia’s artistic practice begins with bodily experience. She works with memory, trauma, and presence through posthumanist surrealism. Rejecting the idea of reincarnation, the artist focuses on what remains — the traces that experience leaves in the body.

Notably, Yuliia Holub does not illustrate concepts; she responds to lived states. Each work starts in the body, passes through the image, and culminates in reflection. She perceives death not as transcendence, but as a filter through which meaning is sharpened.

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