Photos: The ridiculous mansion that Ukraine’s president abandoned and is now a museum
Editor’s note: When the revolutionaries of the Maidan, Kyiv’s central square, toppled president Viktor Yanukovych in February, he fled the country, leaving behind a 140-hectare (330-acre) estate, Mezhyhirya (or Mezhgorye in Russian), complete with a zoo, a vast mansion, several guesthouses, lakes, fountains, a dock with a faux Spanish galleon, a large collection of classic cars, and more besides.
Seven months on, the estate continues to function as a museum for curious tourists and a wedding site for local couples. Unlike the abandoned palaces of so many despots, it is in practically pristine condition, tended by a group of former revolutionaries who came to gawk and stayed to run the place. On the eve of this weekend’s parliamentary election, Misha Friedman, a Russian-American photographer, visited and photographed it. His pictures capture the absurd luxury, but also convey a sadness and loneliness that it must have had even when it was inhabited.—Gideon Lichfield
“A lot of couples get married at Mezhgorye. This courtyard has fake Greek columns like the ones at Khersones [Chersonesus, an archaeological site in Crimea], so they call it Yanukovych’s Khersones. I saw five weddings in three hours, and it was a Friday. I’m sure it’s even busier on a Saturday or Sunday, a constant stream. It’s not that people are saying ‘we fought at the Maidan, so we have to hold our wedding here.’ It’s completely unironic—there’s nice landscape, and some ponds, and it’s a new landmark, and so it’s like, ‘Why not?’”
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