Invalid e-mail and/or password. Try again or click on "Forgot your password?" link.
This field cannot be empty
The fields do not match
Field is not a valid e-mail
Please enter a valid password.
In the world’s largest refugee camps, Artolution is using art to fight COVID and gender-based violence and heal the scars of genocide.
Three years ago, during the first of his five extended visits to Kutapalong and Balukhali Refugee Camps in Bangladesh — home to more than 1 million Rohingya refugees who have fled a decades-long genocide waged by the government of Myanmar — Max Frieder, founder of Artolution, spent six weeks going door-to-door, asking anyone and everyone if they knew any artists. The answer, day after day, was that there were no artists in the camp — they simply did not exist.
“I said, ‘that’s impossible, every culture has artists,’ but people told me no, in Myanmar, Rohingya aren’t allowed to be artists. It was like talking to Jews who escaped from Germany under Hitler. They said that at first, they had been allowed to study only certain subjects. Then none. Then they were not allowed to marry. In 1982, the Citizenship Law was passed, specifying that there were 172 official races in Myanmar, and the Rohingya were not one of them. So they had no rights.”
Eventually Frieder did find some artists. One had drawn on scraps of garbage with charcoal while his family was in hiding. Another had hidden his Rohingya identity, gone to school, and learned to draw diagrams. A third had practiced breakdancing alone, in hiding.
“You really can’t make this stuff up,” says Frieder, who received his Ed.D. in Art & Art Education in May.
It would be equally hard to dream up Frieder himself, or Artolution, the nonprofit he co-founded, which creates art around the world with refugees, street youth, the incarcerated, people with physical and mental disabilities, and young people living in areas of violent conflict or extreme poverty. Artolution is active in eight regions globally, and has major projects ongoing in refugee camps and host communities in Uganda, Colombia, Jordan and Bangladesh. Frieder has personally led the latter, building a team of Rohingya visual artists and musicians who are creating culturally relevant messaging around issues of human rights, gender-based violence, host-refugee relations and — especially critical right now, in light of the COVID crisis — public health.
Read More ^
在全球最大的难民营,Artolution用画笔抗击新冠病毒和性别暴力,疗愈压迫留下的伤痕以世界为画布,描绘明媚色彩
 

  • Jordan
在全球最大的难民营,Artolution用画笔抗击新冠病毒和性别暴力,疗愈压迫留下的伤痕以世界为画布,描绘明媚色彩

  • Jordan

在我的认知里,‘这根本是不可能的,每一种文化中都有着艺术家的影子’,但这里的难民让我知道,事实并非如此,在缅甸,罗兴亚人是不被允许成为艺术家的。这种感觉颇像是希特勒统治时期从德国逃出来的犹太人。 Max Frieder

在全球最大的难民营,Artolution用画笔抗击新冠病毒和性别暴力,疗愈压迫留下的伤痕以世界为画布,描绘明媚色彩
  • Uganda
在全球最大的难民营,Artolution用画笔抗击新冠病毒和性别暴力,疗愈压迫留下的伤痕以世界为画布,描绘明媚色彩
 

  • Bangladesh
在全球最大的难民营,Artolution用画笔抗击新冠病毒和性别暴力,疗愈压迫留下的伤痕以世界为画布,描绘明媚色彩
  • Bangladesh
在全球最大的难民营,Artolution用画笔抗击新冠病毒和性别暴力,疗愈压迫留下的伤痕以世界为画布,描绘明媚色彩
 

  • Colombia
在全球最大的难民营,Artolution用画笔抗击新冠病毒和性别暴力,疗愈压迫留下的伤痕以世界为画布,描绘明媚色彩
  • Uganda
在全球最大的难民营,Artolution用画笔抗击新冠病毒和性别暴力,疗愈压迫留下的伤痕以世界为画布,描绘明媚色彩
  • Max Frieder
Forgotten Password
Please enter the email address you registered with, and we will send you a link to reset your password.
SUBMIT
Forgotten Password
Please enter the email address you registered with, and we will send you a link to reset your password.
SUBMIT
Forgot your password?
Please enter the e-mail address you registered with, and we will send you a link to reset your password.
Thank you
An email with instructions to reset your password has been sent to