Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky keeps a painting of Russia’s capital on fire in his office, claiming the piece is “about victory.” TIME published a photograph of Zelensky posing in front of the painting, which appears to depict the Kremlin ablaze along with the tomb of the late Soviet leader Vladimir Lenin. Ukraine has directly attacked Moscow several times since the conflict began in 2022, largely using drones, but casualties and damage have been minimal.
The photographs of Zelensky’s office were taken last week, and the artwork was apparently hand-picked by the Ukrainian leader. Along with the painting of Moscow on fire—Zelensky’s favorite—there are two other paintings depicting Ukrainian soldiers invading Russian territory and the sinking of a Russian warship in the Black Sea.
The TIME photos undermine Zelensky’s claims he is trying to engage with both the United States and Russia to negotiate a ceasefire in the conflict between Ukraine and Russia. While initially, President Donald J. Trump was able to get the Russians to agree to a ceasefire on striking energy infrastructure, the Russians claimed Ukraine violated the agreement just hours later.
Despite Zelensky’s claims that “victory” is “where I live,” his forces have been in retreat virtually everywhere in recent months. Ukraine did report capturing one small village in the Luhansk region of the Donbas—otherwise almost entirely under Russian control—in recent days, but this comes as a Ukrainian counter-invasion of Russia’s Kursk region, using some of the country’s strongest reserves, is suffering a “catastrophic” rout.
Volodymyr Zelensky’s favorite painting in his office shows the Kremlin engulfed in flames. “Each one’s about victory. That’s where I live” https://t.co/AgZtLQnlda pic.twitter.com/Yb5zDV46js
— TIME (@TIME) March 24, 2025
Jack Montgomery contributed to this report.