The Ukrainian Gate
Project

13 Blacksmiths Forge for a Cause

After hearing about an award-winning Ukrainian blacksmith who left his anvil to fight against the Russian invasion, a group of Ontario blacksmiths collaboratively created a forged work of art to help support this blacksmith, his wife and their two children.

This ambitious undertaking took hundreds of hours of voluntary work from 13 artist blacksmiths and metalworkers. Funds raised from the sale of the gate will go directly to supporting this Ukrainian family. It will be available for purchase early 2024.

The Story Behind the Gate

“I had the pleasure of being introduced to a Ukrainian refugee who arrived here in Ontario. Irina and her two daughters are looking to re-establish themselves in my area, and I decided to help them do just that. Irina is a talented designer of ironwork, and her husband is a blacksmith, which gave me the idea of building a gate of her design to raise funds for her and her family. Luckily I am not the only crazy blacksmith I know, so I reached out to a few other smiths to join in on the journey.”

- Robb Martin, Thak Ironworks

We met on April 15th 2023 at Two Smiths in Kitchener to develop a strategy, and each smith left with a full-scale drawing and their assigned element. During our meeting, everyone got to meet Irina, who, through translation, explained the concept to us:

“Most of us live our lives recklessly while we are young. Time seems to pass extremely slowly. We try to speed up our lives, in the eagerness to become adults. After a certain age things change and we begin to wish time would slow, as there are so many things left to do; to live; to experience. We try to achieve as many goals as possible, so that we can relax and enjoy our gains during our retirement.

My life had been a sprint: Running family business, creating projects, interacting with clients, meeting deadlines, managing personnel and production, all while being a mother of two kids. 24 hours seemed to be not enough.

It was like that… up to a certain moment that has divided my life into 2 chapters.

However, I am not in my second chapter yet. I feel like I am stuck somewhere between my old life and the new. It's like I'm in slow motion, falling down a cliff. Left the ground, but did not touch the water yet. Now I am observing the world from inside the bubble, as if I have sunk into another dimension, where time does not exist.

I have depicted my recent life experience in this design: one side of the clock-face has no numbers on it, and another side is torn, which metaphorically represents this challenging period of my life. Of anyone's life.

The steampunk elements add to the idea of the alternative reality while the forged elements on the top and in the bottom remain balanced and sophisticated to represent the beauty and harmony of life itself as it goes on.”

I feel like I am stuck somewhere between my old life and the new. It’s like I’m in slow motion, falling down a cliff.
— Irina

Participating Blacksmiths

Forging the Gate

These photos were taken in many shops across Ontario. Each blacksmith worked from a scaled drawing of the gate, and then brought their piece to Thak Ironworks, where the final gate was assembled.

Press

Read more about The Ukrainian Gate Project:

Have questions?
You can connect with the project head, Robb Martin, here: info@thak.ca