As it follows from the occupation “media”, the so-called “long-term dispute over buildings that previously belonged to the Union of Artists of the USSR” ended in a “tragicomedy” in Sevastopol.
It was stated that these objects, buildings on Volodarsky and Repina streets, as well as garages, legally belonging to the National Union of Artists of Ukraine, were “claimed” in the occupation “courts” by the “Union of Artists of Russia”, which considers itself the “successor of Soviet artists” and stated that the Ukrainian owner “did not re-register his rights” with the occupiers after 2014.
Since, until 2014, these buildings, among other things, were rented by Sevastopol creative structures and individual artists, new participants allegedly “constantly joined” the “case that had been dragging on since 2018”, including the criminal “department of property and land relations”, and the “government” of the occupiers, as well as “several organizations and individuals”.
The occupation “court”, however, “left both the Russian “Union of Artists” and the Sevastopol tenants in the dust, stating that all the buildings “have been the property of the city since 2014”.
Now all sorts of “creative unions of artists”, as well as the “artistic production plant”, as well as individual “masters of the brush” will most likely be left on the street.



