您现在的位置是:熱點 >>正文
【】
熱點874人已围观
简介LONDON -- There's no place like home. But each day 34,000 people are forced to leave the place they ...
LONDON -- There's no place like home. But each day 34,000 people are forced to leave the place they call home due to conflict or persecution.
SEE ALSO:Powerful photo series honours refugee fathers around the worldFor the 21.3 million refugees currently in the world, hope is something that doesn't always come easily. But one artist has joined forces with a group of refugee women from Syria and Ukraine in an effort to create a powerful symbol of hope for those displaced by conflict.
Initially, Polish artist Olek was tasked with building an art installation based on a traditional 19th-century Swedish home for the Verket museum in Avesta, Sweden. However, when she joined forces with a group of women refugees from Syria and Ukraine, her project grew beyond what she had first anticipated.
As Olek worked alongside these women crocheting swathes of fabric for the installation, they began to share their personal stories and photographs from their pasts.

"They showed me pictures of their houses -- their destroyed houses. They showed me pictures from before and after the bombs had destroyed their houses. And the women told me stories about how they ran away from war to survive," Olek told Mashable.
"They showed me pictures from before and after the bombs had destroyed their houses."
Olek was profoundly affected by the women's stories and the photos they showed her.
"When the Syrian and Ukrainian refugees who helped me install my piece started telling me the candid stories of their recent experiences and horrors of their home countries, I decided to blow up my crocheted house to illustrate the current unfortunate situation worldwide, where hundreds of thousands of people are displaced," Olek said.
When the women who had worked with Olek on the installation saw a video of it being destroyed, many were moved to tears. Olek says one woman told her that blowing up the installation was an important act in showing the world the current situation in countries torn by conflict.

Olek didn't want the project to end there.
“After I exploded the house, I wanted to create a positive ending for them as a symbol of a brighter future for all people, especially the ones who have been displaced against their own will,” Olek continued.
Olek -- along with the group of women -- got to work on the next stage of the project: building a symbol of hope. This time around, the fruits of their labour would not be blown up.

This symbol also took the form of two pink crocheted houses -- one in Avesta, Sweden, and another in Kerava, Finland.However, the history of the Kerava house adds another poignant dimension to the project: the house was itself a survivor of war.

During the Winter War -- a military conflict between the Soviet Union and Finland from 1939 to 1940 -- bombs fell into the property's garden, but the house and the family living there survived.
Over the course of three weeks, a large group of volunteers and women from a reception centre for asylum seekers got together to crochet. Together with some assistance from a professional team in Poland, they produced over 300 square metres. Those swathes of bright pink crochet are now covering the house near the railway station in Kerava, from the chimney to the house's stone base.

“Our pink house is about the journey, not just about the artwork itself. It’s about us coming together as a community. It’s about helping each other. We can show everybody that women can build houses, women can make homes," said Olek."Women have the ability to recreate themselves. No matter how low life might bring us, we can get back on our feet and start anew."
Both pink crocheted houses will be on display until the winter.
TopicsSocial Good
Tags:
转载:欢迎各位朋友分享到网络,但转载请说明文章出处“夫榮妻貴網”。http://new.maomao321.com/news/41d8099878.html
相关文章
Snapchat is about to explode in popularity, report says
熱點Snapchat is about to have a couple of really good years. 。The company will see huge gains in the numb ...
【熱點】
阅读更多'Marvel's Avengers' is a superhero saga that's only just beginning
熱點Over the past decade, the Avengers have risen from being the provenance of comic book aficionados to ...
【熱點】
阅读更多NFL paints 'End Racism' on its fields and no, this isn't a joke
熱點The NFL's unhelpful attempt at standing for social justice is getting dragged by Twitter. NFL Commis ...
【熱點】
阅读更多
热门文章
- Snapchat is about to explode in popularity, report says
- 'Marvel's Avengers' is a superhero saga that's only just beginning
- Amazon quietly announces major expansion to neighborhood surveillance networks
- Colossal Western fires look ever more menacing, viewed from space
- Mall builds real
- Video call lens turns gestures into comic
最新文章
Dramatic photo captures nun texting friends after Italy earthquake
'Marvel's Avengers' is a superhero saga that's only just beginning
Facebook and Google probably won't like this new antitrust agreement
Facebook and Google probably won't like this new antitrust agreement
Give your kitchen sponge a rest on this adorable bed
Twitter to investigate apparent racial bias in photo previews