Victoria Markovna Ivleva-York () is a Russian photographer and political activist. In 1992 she was awarded the World Press Photo of the Year award in the Science & Technology category for her series of photographs taken on 1 January 1991 of the Chernobyl plant. She prefers to take photographs in black-and-white.
Her photographs of Africa, taken after convincing the Minister of Emergency Situations, to let her travel to Rwanda, were exhibited in the Voznesensky Center in Moscow in May 2021. In November 2021 she was detained by police in Moscow for her single person protests in Pushkin Square in support of the Russian human rights organisation Memorial.
Ivleva has described herself as " ... an activist, not an activist-journalist, but an activist as a person". She protested on Pushkin Square in Moscow for the release of the Ukrainian filmmaker Oleg Sentsov and bought food for captured Ukrainian sailors held in the Lefortovo Prison. In 2021 Ivleva described the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian War as her "deepest pain" as to "fight a war with a close neighbor and close friend is a tragedy. If we had a normal government, the first thing we'd do would be to stop the war, get down on our knees before them for what we did to them, pay them reparations, and ask them for forgiveness" and that she felt it was " ... so obvious that Ukraine is weaker and it's their land". Ivleva was detained by police in Moscow in November 2021 for her single person protests in Pushkin Square in support of the Russian human rights organisation Memorial. She was subsequently fined 150,000 Russian ruble and found guilty of violating the laws on public gatherings.
Ivleva prefers to take photographs in black and white.
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