The Phnom Penh Post

VN exhibition shows butterflie­s made by disabled kids

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HUNDREDS of glittering butterflie­s made of paper affixed to a wall have caught visitors’ eyes at an art exhibition in Hanoi.

The exhibition entitled Become A Butterfly is an installati­on by South Korean AhnYun-mo at the Korean Cultural Centre.

On each wall the butterflie­s look like small people with two wings, flying together in one direction.

Moving closer and looking at the butterflie­s, visitors will see many of them are somewhat messy, but made with no less love than the aesthetica­lly pleasing butterflie­s.

That’s because many of them have been made by children with disabiliti­es from the US, Africa, Indonesia, Europe and Vietnam.

Among the 1,300 paper butterflie­s are about 100 by students with disabiliti­es from Binh Minh Specialise­d School in Hanoi at a workshop held on Monday.

For many of the disabled children, their butterfly was their first complete artwork.

“This is the first time our students have met and exchanged with a Korean artist,” said Luu Thi Thu Hong, head of Binh Minh Specialise­d School.

“The event is very meaningful to the students and gives them a chance to express their wishes to integrate into the community. I hope their artworks will be performed in the world under the artist’s project.”

The exhibition is part of the project Become A Butterfly initiated by Ahn with children and youth with disablitie­s worldwide since 2013.

“People who live in this world can overcome all barriers of skin colour and language,” said Ahn at the exhibition.

“The exhibition helps to break the gap between people with disabiliti­es and normal people, creating a new step in promoting the basic role of art to bring people closer together.”

The touring exhibition has been held at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Bozar Centre for Fine Art in Brussels and other museums in Indonesia, Ethiopia, Thailand, China, Kenya and France.

Ahn received her Masters of Fine Arts from New York City University and has held nearly 80 individual exhibition­s at home, in Europe and the US.

“This exhibition has a special meaning because of the people who make it,” said the centre’s director Park Hyejin.

“Culture and art are invisible bridges connecting strangers to each other to overcome all inherent physical barriers. I hope that the butterflie­s in the exhibition will create more wonderful things to connect the hearts of Vietnamese and Korean people more closely.”

 ?? THIEN DIEU/VNS ?? A girl poses for a photo with hundreds of colourful butterflie­s at the exhibition in Hanoi.
THIEN DIEU/VNS A girl poses for a photo with hundreds of colourful butterflie­s at the exhibition in Hanoi.

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