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Published: 2008-04-26 15:20:52 +0000 UTC; Views: 6351; Favourites: 126; Downloads: 201
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Description
Ref for the girl from Elandria and Dreamers of Avalon StockToday marks the 22nd anniversary of the Chernobyl accident in what is now the Ukraine.
The girl in the picture is wearing a traditional Ukrainian headdress of a wreath of flowers and ribbons. The sign in the upper left hand corner says "Radiation", and the signs on the ground say "Chernobyl" and "Pripyat". Most people don't know that there were hundreds of small villages in the 30 km radioactive zone that were razed to the ground and buried because they were so hot. Future generations have remembered these villages by placing signs on the road where they existed, and drawing a red mark through them, indicating they were "marked out". The town of Chernobyl still has a few hundred people living there, mostly those that still work at the nuclear plant and those that keep an eye on the surrounding area. (The nuclear plant closed down in 2000, but it will always have to be monitored for safety reasons). Pripyat, the town actually closest to the nuclear plant, still stands, but it may as well be marked out. It is a ghost town, represented here by it's sign, and by the ferris wheel, which was part of an amusement park built for the children, due to open in May of 86, but it never got that chance. I've taken some artistic license with the plant itself, because the sarcophagus is covering it, but it shows the radiation escaping at the same time. Another fact that most people don't know, and probably the most disturbing, is that during the accident of 1986 only %3 of the total radiation escaped, and we see how much damage it has done. At the same time, %97 of the radiation is still inside, capable of escaping at any time, and the sarcophagus containing it is in danger of collapse. If the remaining radiation inside ever escapes, it will render most of Western Europe uninhabitable. A new containment shelter has been designed, but the Ukraine still doesn't have the money to build it.
Immediately following the explosion in 86, thousands of Soviet men gave their lives to stop the radiation from continuing to leak. The lives of millions of women and children were forever changed. Millions of animals were destroyed, like those in the abandoned city of Pripyat, hunted down and shot because they were radioactive. Thyroid cancers in Belarus is up by %200, mostly in children. Those affected have had their DNA changed forever. While our lives go on, day by day, the people of Ukraine and Belarus live with the effects of this disaster. For them, it will never be over.
It will be at least 600 years before anyone can go inside Reactor Number 4 again.
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Comments: 29
Raakone [2015-08-30 15:41:43 +0000 UTC]
Nice picture, and it captures what happened well! I think in Europe, a sign with a city name with a line through it either means "you are leaving it" or "it was renamed recently"....but here, you "leave it" without getting a chance to really see it, very fitting.
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curbsidevisionary [2010-06-27 23:18:38 +0000 UTC]
Stunning. The artwork is phenomenal, and the colours capture so much emotion, portray so much of the weight of the event and its lasting effect on the area. As a Ukrainian-Canadian, this is a topic that breaks my heart and stirs deep grief and rage within me. Thank you for putting into am image what I can't put into words.
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aurianfae [2009-09-10 15:58:24 +0000 UTC]
I just wanted to let you know that I am taking this picture (via a link to this page) to my Interacive Art class today to discuss with the rest of my class. The teacher had instructed us to bring a link to a piece of artwork that we found compelling and this was the first one that came to my mind when he mentioned it.
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beccacox In reply to aurianfae [2009-11-03 10:44:43 +0000 UTC]
Hi, sorry it took me so long to answer you. I'm busy working these days and haven't had much time for my art. I'm thrilled that you liked that image enough to show it to others and to discuss it. I feel very strongly about Chernobyl, and while I wanted the image to be disturbing, I still wanted some beauty in it, too. I hope your class enjoyed seeing it, and I hope you get an A.
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aurianfae In reply to beccacox [2009-11-03 16:16:20 +0000 UTC]
Thanks very much! I thought it was a very thought-provoking piece, and I hope other people take it as an opportunity to look at your other artwork as well! Though one of the other people in my class speaks Russian and he said that Chernobyl was misspelled? I have no idea, that's just something he mentioned.
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beccacox In reply to aurianfae [2009-11-13 07:54:00 +0000 UTC]
Well if the Russian guy said it was misspelled, he's probably right..lol. I don't remember where I got the russian spelling from. Rats. Maybe I'll correct that. Thanks for letting me know
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aurianfae In reply to beccacox [2009-11-13 22:54:41 +0000 UTC]
No problem! I didn't want to be a bother, but he pointed it out and I told him that I would let you know. ^_^
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WinterLeaves [2009-08-31 12:52:45 +0000 UTC]
Amazing, just amazing. I could say so much about this picture...but I can't seem find the words. Instant fave. <3
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OLISITA [2009-05-21 22:05:41 +0000 UTC]
hi, i'm from ukraine. as far as i know there wouldn't have been such a huge disaster if there had been provided correct actions in putting fire down. moreover, the goverment of USSR kept that explosion in a strict secret despite a great holiday on the 1st of May. That day a really big amount of peole was right under scorching sun without knowing about the danger.
now many young people die because of distinctly encreased occurrences of different oncologycal deseases.
hopegiving, huh?
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lookinsideyourart [2009-05-09 23:29:13 +0000 UTC]
Some people say it was the worst nuclear disaster to have happened
It's not because it's still happening
And it is a very sobering thought that if the present shelter or 'Sarcophagus' collapses it will be like dropping a stone in a bowl of flour :s
But if you think this is bad.......look up 'seversk' or 'Tomsk-7' even more worrying.
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Thousand-Knights-Art [2008-12-12 01:14:18 +0000 UTC]
wow i feel your sorrow, ive always have interests of the disaster of Chernoby. but it is more depressing as i see more of these dark images. your work is fascinating as it dose reflect these dark time and what dangers still lye at the place.
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Sakura-ness [2008-06-07 06:50:02 +0000 UTC]
You, know, the first time I heard the story I never heard those things about the 3 % of the radiation...wow only 3 % effected so much...imagine what would it be if the other 97 escapes! D:
Anyway where did you get this story from?
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beccacox In reply to Sakura-ness [2008-06-07 18:26:03 +0000 UTC]
Everything I stated is a fact. I've gotten them all from numerous books, documentaries, and websites on the subject. I've done alot of studying on it.
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frobozz [2008-06-05 23:42:08 +0000 UTC]
Love it! I don't think I'd seen the final version until now. I'm curious about the wording on the fallen signs -- what do they say?
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beccacox In reply to frobozz [2008-06-06 05:23:20 +0000 UTC]
Here's the description that I put with the picture... I hope I can fit this in:
The girl in the picture is wearing a traditional Ukrainian headdress of a wreath of flowers and ribbons. The sign in the upper left hand corner says "Radiation", and the signs on the ground say "Chernobyl" and "Pripyat". Most people don't know that there were hundreds of small villages in the 30 km radioactive zone that were razed to the ground and buried because they were so hot. Future generations have remembered these villages by placing signs on the road where they existed, and drawing a red mark through them, indicating they were "marked out". The town of Chernobyl still has a few hundred people living there, mostly those that still work at the nuclear plant and those that keep an eye on the surrounding area. (The nuclear plant closed down in 2000, but it will always have to be monitored for safety reasons). Pripyat, the town actually closest to the nuclear plant, still stands, but it may as well be marked out. It is a ghost town, represented here by it's sign, and by the ferris wheel, which was part of an amusement park built for the children, due to open in May of 86, but it never got that chance. I've taken some artistic license with the plant itself, because the sarcophagus is covering it, but it shows the radiation escaping at the same time. Another fact that most people don't know, and probably the most disturbing, is that during the accident of 1986 only %3 of the total radiation escaped, and we see how much damage it has done. At the same time, %97 of the radiation is still inside, capable of escaping at any time, and the sarcophagus containing it is in danger of collapse. If the remaining radiation inside ever escapes, it will render most of Western Europe uninhabitable. A new containment shelter has been designed, but the Ukraine still doesn't have the money to build it.
Immediately following the explosion in 86, thousands of Soviet men gave their lives to stop the radiation from continuing to leak. The lives of millions of women and children were forever changed. Millions of animals were destroyed, like those in the abandoned city of Pripyat, hunted down and shot because they were radioactive. Thyroid cancers in Belarus is up by %200, mostly in children. Those affected have had their DNA changed forever. While our lives go on, day by day, the people of Ukraine and Belarus live with the effects of this disaster. For them, it will never be over.
It will be at least 600 years before anyone can go inside Reactor Number 4 again.
👍: 0 ⏩: 0
Lauretha [2008-04-27 07:44:25 +0000 UTC]
"If the remaining radiation inside ever escapes, it will render most of Western Europe uninhabitable. A new containment shelter has been designed, but the Ukraine still doesn't have the money to build it."
Um.. If that is true, then why, by the Nine Hells, won't the UE give them money for it? After all, it concerns all of us, not only Ukraine... Perhaps some series of happenings to collect the money could be organized?
Eh, so depressing...
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beccacox In reply to Lauretha [2008-04-28 03:06:11 +0000 UTC]
The last I heard, I think there was a French consortium trying to raise the money for the new shelter. It will probably cost in the billions. You would think every country on earth would want to contribute.
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Ana-Lyn [2008-04-27 03:02:48 +0000 UTC]
Very sobering reminder of a tragic event.
Wonderful work and information.
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Elandria [2008-04-27 00:05:18 +0000 UTC]
Such a feeling of regret in this, and very very fitting to the real state of Pripyat and Chernobyl. Thanks for using my stock sweety!
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beccacox In reply to Elandria [2008-04-28 03:06:39 +0000 UTC]
Thank YOU for providing such great stock!
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RaNuit [2008-04-26 18:16:15 +0000 UTC]
beautiful and a well done reminder to mans personal idiocy with weapons they shouldn't use
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savageworlds [2008-04-26 16:09:12 +0000 UTC]
Rather sobering concept... well conveyed by your imagery. Thanks for bringing this to a higher level of attention.
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One meets his destiny often in the road he takes to avoid it. (French Proverb)
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