The Ukrainian Institute of America extends its best wishes for a blessed Easter. Wishing you and your loved ones, above all, health – and a peaceful and joyous holiday. Christ is Risen!
Easter Greetings from the Ukrainian Institute of America

The Ukrainian Institute of America extends its best wishes for a blessed Easter. Wishing you and your loved ones, above all, health – and a peaceful and joyous holiday. Christ is Risen!
The Ukrainian Institute of America joins the #LightBlue initiative to honor essential workers on the frontlines of COVID-19.
Take a journey back in time to 1960 to the DZUS® factory located in West Islip, NY and see the founder of the Ukrainian Institute of America, William Dzus, as inventor and entrepreneur.
Two years ago, Art at the Institute opened its spring season with an exhibition of evocative landscape paintings, titled Silence, by Kyiv-based contemporary artist Oleksiy Lytvynenko. We invite you to travel back in time and revisit this exhibition.
Take a Virtual Tour of New York’s Museum District featuring the Ukrainian Institute of America.
Featuring the legendary ballerina and choreographer Roma Pryma-Bohachevsky and the Syzokryli Dance Ensemble of New York, this comedy-docu-drama is relevant to anyone trying to balance ties to one’s heritage and culture in a modern world.
Opera Wire published a breakdown of all the companies that are streaming online for your operatic delight.
The Ukrainian painter Vasyl Diadyniuk does not possess much of a household name except in the more specialized of art historical circles. However, his paintings of luminaries from the annals of Ukrainian history — from the Princely era of Kyivan Rus’, the Principality of Galicia-Volhynia, to the Cossacks and the Hetman state, for example — ubiquitously appear in widely distributed illustrations, poster designs, book publishing, and even postcards.
On this day, six years ago, Art at the Institute presented the art project by Petro Bevza and Mykola Zhuravel “Following the Inner Light.” It celebrated the Bicentennial of Taras Shevchenko’s birth. We invite you to travel back in time and revisit this exhibition.
Did you know that the Ukrainian Institute’s building was once owned by The Metropolitan Museum of Art? Learn more fascinating facts about our historic building.