The Star Malaysia

Polish village's painted blooms draw crowds

-

ZALIPIE: Danuta Dymon is sitting by the side of the road, painting flowers on her fence.

The 70-year-old has been at it since the sun came up, dressed from head to toe in clothes also displaying her brushstrok­es.

“As you can see I’m covered in flowers,” she said, adding neon green leaves to the fluorescen­t orange and pink garland spanning the fence’s brick base in front of her home in Zalipie, in southern Poland.

Dymon is known around the farming village for having painted flowers on virtually everything under her roof: the ceiling, walls, curtains, pillows, kettle, wooden spoons, boiler, even the toilet.

She took to the paintbrush with particular gusto but she is not alone: for over a century, Zalipie women – and the occasional man – have been decorating the inside and outside of their homes with folk art.

Last year, some 25,000 tourists from countries as far away as Japan and the United States visited the village of 700 people to see the bright, cheerful flowers that adorn about a quarter of the cottages nestled among fields of corn, cabbage and strawberri­es.

The tradition began in the late 19th century as a way to cover up sooted walls in the smoke-filled area around the stove, according to the head of the local community centre, Wanda Chlastawa.

“Women would take a homemade brush, dip it in whitewash and whack at the dirty wall to brighten up the space with the white splotches,” the 59-year-old director of the centre, appropriat­ely called the House of Painters, said.

“Later they started adding dots, lines and circles and that’s how the first primitive flowers came to be.”

The first floral motifs were limit- ed to three colours – white, black and beige – made at home out of lime whitewash, soot and clay, while early brushes included birch branches with shredded ends, as well as horse or cow tail hairs tied together with twine.

At 78, Maria Chlastawa – not related to Wanda – remembers making the brushes at home, as well as using the powdered paints the women would buy once they expanded their repertoire into today’s flashy rainbow range of colours.

“My mum painted so I’ve been painting since childhood. Then my daughter started painting as a kid, and now my granddaugh­ter is painting too.

“It’s tradition, from one generation to the next,” Maria said.

 ??  ?? Floral splendour: Chlastawa strolling along her yard, where the walls of various buildings are covered with traditiona­l flower patterns in Zalipie, southern Poland. — AFP
Floral splendour: Chlastawa strolling along her yard, where the walls of various buildings are covered with traditiona­l flower patterns in Zalipie, southern Poland. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia