Lecturer
Constance Uzwyshyn
Constance Uzwyshyn is a PhD candidate at the University of Cambridge, specialising in post-independence Ukrainian contemporary and war art. Her research engages visual culture, trauma theory, and postcolonial critique to examine the epistemological and political dimensions of Ukrainian art in the context of Russian aggression. She founded Kyiv’s first private gallery, ARTEast (1997–2004), curated landmark exhibitions including The Great Ukrainian Women’s Art Exhibitions (1995–1998), and established Ukraine’s first art auction (1993).
She holds an MA in Art Market and Appraisal (now Art Business) from Kingston University London, where her dissertation, The Emergence of the Ukrainian Art Market (2021), informs her current lectures on value, commodification, art law, and market structures in post-Soviet Ukrainian art economies. She currently serves as Creative Industries Advisor at the Ukrainian Institute London, where she manages and co-curates Kultura. Uzwyshyn is also Art Advisor to the Cambridge Journal of Law, Politics and Art. Her projects have been featured internationally, including Windows, Signs of Peace (SCHUNCK, 2024). She is Director of Art Arsenal World, a charity supporting acquisitions for Mystetskyi Arsenal, Ukraine’s largest state museum, and developing strategic initiatives to promote Ukrainian art education and cultural resilience.
