Parisian street artist C215, who recently created a series of murals that highlighted the human cost of the war in Ukraine, arrived in the war-torn country to paint a portrait of a little girl on a bus shelter.
"It's a sign of support," the energetic 48-year-old tells Agence France-Presse (AFP), spray can in hand. "If this can bring a little smile or a bit of humanity in a difficult situation, then I'm satisfied."
One of France's leading street artists, the man – whose real name is Christian Guemy – traveled to Ukraine to tag the country's walls with images of peace and innocence in a time of brutal war.
After the Russian invasion, the one-time Banksy collaborator did a huge mural of the same girl in the colors of the Ukrainian flag covering the side of a Paris apartment block.
But despite the dangers C215 felt he "had no choice" but to come to Ukraine itself, after meeting Ukrainians and wondering for several days what more he could do to help.
"I didn't really decide to come to Kyiv, it was more that my paintings decided for me," he told AFP last week, as Kyiv residents stopped and took pictures of him at work.
This painting of a young girl with a headband of flowers is located next to a metro station and food market that were badly damaged by a Russian strike – which he says shows Russia is deliberately targeting civilians.
"It's very intense to see the contrast with the bombed building behind," he said.
"If you want to do street art that speaks about war, the work must be in the place where the war is, and it must show the destruction and the situation in that country."
C215's own journey began with a traumatic upbringing, born in a tough Paris suburb to a teenage mother who killed herself, and then a painful break-up that caused him to sink into depression.
After the split, he gave up his job to start doing graffiti, stencilling his daughter's portrait to "channel my depression" and developing his technique of cutting out faces in card then spray-painting them.
That technique can now be seen in several places around Kyiv.
C215 gives AFP a tour of his works, including one on a rusty signboard near the city's TV tower that was targeted in a deadly Russian missile strike on March 2 which killed five people.
Another picture of a girl is stenciled on an abandoned tram near a checkpoint, painted in the same faded red and cream colors as the carriage.
He has also tagged walls in the western city of Lviv, where a huge missile struck an oil depot during his time there, and in the central town of Zhytomyr.
The imagery of childhood that haunts his work – he has said his work was "too French, too tragic" to continue his Banksy collaboration – is clear in all his Ukrainian works.
"A child is an innocent, a child doesn't have to cope with war, and in this war there are millions of mothers and children that are spread all over Europe," he said.
Walking off into the rain in his cagoule, C215 says he is returning to France soon but will definitely be coming back to Kyiv.
The reaction from Ukrainians themselves has been "super – that is what makes me happy."