NEWS

Contents – The Art of War: How artists and writers battle with censorship in times of conflict
Contents
13 Jul 2026

Contents

War is brutal. During conflicts there is little time for art. Museums and theatres are flattened by bombs, a trend we have been covering in Index for some years now. On the ground, people often have more pressing concerns like finding food or repelling the enemy. But war can also inspire the most incredible artistic endeavour, as painters and poets are forced to look again at a fragile world and bear witness to the atrocities that warring parties would rather keep hidden.

In this issue, Martin Bright talks to Magnum photographer and artist Nanna Heitmann about her work The Machinery of War, which presents uncomfortable truths about propaganda and the Ukraine war.

As Salil Tripathi writes from the USA, writers and artists are able to discuss the Israel-Hamas war much more freely than they could during the Iraq war a quarter-century ago, and are less likely to face blanket censorship. After 9/11, Tripathi observes, George Bush essentially threw down the gauntlet. War is often talked about in stark black and white terms, but artists are able to give nuance.

Maria Sorenson makes this point while highlighting work about war that has been censored in Russia, Belarus and Ukraine because it does not toe the official patriotic line. “Narrowing life into ideology, flattening human complexity into slogans, symbols and sanctioned truths is what propaganda does best. Art has always been – and still remains – one of the ways to resist that,” she writes.

Enjoy the magazine. It has reports and discussions from around the world about how censorship works today, and about how brave artists continue to struggle to explain the complexity of the world

Up Front

The art of war: Sally Gimson
Artists across the globe fight back against censors in times of war

The Index: Mark Stimpson
All the latest free expression news, elections and people to watch

Features

Complacency, culture wars, money troubles: Sally Gimson
An investigation into suppression of political theatre in the UK

More haste, less free speech: Amy Fallon
The phrases “globalise the intifada” is banned in Queensland

Prove who you are: Sajad Hameed, Rehan Qayoom Mir
The Kashmiri shawl sellers driven out of business for being Muslim

AI brings the disappeared back to life: Amy Booth
AI imagines the victims of Argentina’s military junta

“Factually incorrect and dangerously one-sided”: Freddie Lowe
How the law is used against artists

Putin’s Russia is policing women’s right to choose: Olga Borisova
Russia wants women to have children, if they want to or not

The long reach of Rwanda: Martin Plaut
Nowhere is out of reach of attacks by Kagame’s government

Targeting dissidents in the UK: Clive Stafford Smith, Roshaan Khattak
Transnational repression from Pakistan to Cambridge with love

The art of war

Şener Özmen’s uncompleted story: Kaya Genç
A profile of the Kurdish artist persecuted for his love of Tracey Emin

The war in Sudan – artists and censorship: Danson Kahyana
Sudanese artists speak about their life in exile

Iranian cinema’s struggle: Tara Aghdashloo
The Iranian filmmakers fighting censorship, no matter the cost

Art and anarchy in troubled times: Maria Sorensen
Artists from in and around the Ukraine war

Beauty – and brutality – in the eye of the beholder: Martin Bright
The War Is Peace? exhibition at Oslo’s Nobel Peace Centre

American art and writing in times of war: Salil Tripathi
Suppression of critical voices in the USA in the wake of 9/11

Comment

Murdering the messenger: Oren Persico
The reasons Israel killed more journalists than any other country last year

Why can’t art be beautiful: Marc Nash
A review of John Byrne’s Useful Art: How Activists Artists Can Change the World

The secret world of royal finances: Norman Baker
The Royal Family should be more open about money

Taking a stance against the banning of books: Katie Dancey-Downs
Index investigates a Manchester school that banned twilight

The wild west: Jemimah Steinfeld
Banning Kanye West could be a slippery slope

The power of a book: Sarah Wynn-Williams
Wynn-Williams’ acceptance speech, about fellow award-winner Virginia Giuffre

Culture

Being queer in Ukraine – tales of citizenship and resistance: Connor O’Brien, J Lester Feder
War, civic duty, and the desire of authoritarian regimes to suppress LGBTQ+ voices.

Shadows called woman: Kaya Genç, Maryam Ranjbari
A painter detained multiple times for her paintings in Iran

Don’t forget the women of Afghanistan: Ruth Green, Marzia Babakarkhail
The author meets an exiled champion of women’s rights

Unrequited love: Steve Komarnyckyj, Khrystia Alchevska
A romantic short story by poet Khrystia Alchevska

Staying Human in a Belarus jail: Hanna Komar
The poet writes about prison

You can read these articles and more by becoming an Index member here.

Support free expression for all

At Index on Censorship, we believe everyone deserves the right to speak freely, challenge power and share ideas without fear. In a world where governments tighten control and algorithms distort the truth, defending those rights is more urgent than ever.

But free speech is not free. Instead we rely on readers like you to keep our journalism independent, our advocacy sharp and our support for writers, artists and dissidents strong.

If you believe in a future where voices aren’t silenced, help us protect it.

Make a £10 monthly donation

At Index on Censorship, we believe everyone deserves the right to speak freely, challenge power and share ideas without fear. In a world where governments tighten control and algorithms distort the truth, defending those rights is more urgent than ever.

But free speech is not free. Instead we rely on readers like you to keep our journalism independent, our advocacy sharp and our support for writers, artists and dissidents strong.

If you believe in a future where voices aren’t silenced, help us protect it.

Make a £20 monthly donation

At Index on Censorship, we believe everyone deserves the right to speak freely, challenge power and share ideas without fear. In a world where governments tighten control and algorithms distort the truth, defending those rights is more urgent than ever.

But free speech is not free. Instead we rely on readers like you to keep our journalism independent, our advocacy sharp and our support for writers, artists and dissidents strong.

If you believe in a future where voices aren’t silenced, help us protect it.

Make a £10 one-off donation

At Index on Censorship, we believe everyone deserves the right to speak freely, challenge power and share ideas without fear. In a world where governments tighten control and algorithms distort the truth, defending those rights is more urgent than ever.

But free speech is not free. Instead we rely on readers like you to keep our journalism independent, our advocacy sharp and our support for writers, artists and dissidents strong.

If you believe in a future where voices aren’t silenced, help us protect it.

Make a £20 one-off donation

At Index on Censorship, we believe everyone deserves the right to speak freely, challenge power and share ideas without fear. In a world where governments tighten control and algorithms distort the truth, defending those rights is more urgent than ever.

But free speech is not free. Instead we rely on readers like you to keep our journalism independent, our advocacy sharp and our support for writers, artists and dissidents strong.

If you believe in a future where voices aren’t silenced, help us protect it.

Donate a different amount

DONATE TO INDEX