VietNamNet Bridge – A throat affliction putting paid to her chosen vocation as a teacher, a young woman stumbles on to a new art form, courtesy some lotus flowers and a Buddhist spirit. Hong Van tells an inspiring story.
Phuong (right, first row) delivered free medicines on a field trip to Ea Phang in the Central Highlands province of Gia Lai. |
Nguyen Nhat Minh Phuong was very clear about her choice of career.
She majored in pedagogy and duly became a teacher. She loved her job.
Two years ago, at the start of the 2015-2016 academic year, she found that her throat was hoarse all the time. At the hospital, she received shocking news.
“They told me that I would have to undergo surgery or quit teaching, otherwise, I may not be able to speak anymore.
“It was very hard at first. I couldn’t help feeling lost and was uncertain about the future,” Phuong said. “I still loved children and I loved teaching a lot.”
A few months later, life sprung another surprise.
"It was late in 2015 that I happened to see a few lotus flower paintings by Ha Hung Dung (an artist famous for works themed on the nation’s northwestern region) on the Internet. I was struck immediately. It is a flower I love, and I started looking for collections of lotus paintings.”
Looking at the paintings, she was struck by a desire to make her own lotuses, though she’d never been an artist, never painted anything.
In fact, “no one in my family pursued art or had a special interest in drawing.”
However, she used to create small pieces of jewelry and accessories as a hobby, and a way to augment her income. A main ingredient in the accessories she was making was copper strings, and she was inspired to use them, somehow. And as soon as she started, she was hooked. For four days straight, it was all that she did.
“It is hard to describe in words. I just poured all my heart and soul into ‘the painting’"
Planning it was the hardest step, she said.
Phuong’s first work, featuring lotuses, was given to a charity organisation called “Thousand Paper Cranes” to raise funds for children. It raised VND3.7 million (US$163). |
Divine guidance
“As it is all about bending the copper string into shapes and objects using my imagination, I had to be meticulous and accurate,” she said.
But there was divine guidance as well.
“I have always been very close to Buddhism, I love the peaceful ambience of pagodas that I was taken to as a child. The lotus, a flower that my mother loves too, has special significance in Buddhism. Therefore, this flower, and later the Buddha, gave me lots of inspiration,” she said.
Phuong gave her first work to a charity organization called “Thousand Paper Cranes” to raise funds for children. It raised VND3.7million (US$163).
When she looks back to that day, she has mixed feelings.
“I was lucky that it was not too late [after she decided to quit her job] before I realised my true passion and ability to paint.”
“It [her illness] took away my chance to teach, but it also gave me the opportunity to find this.”
Phuong does not market her accessories and paintings, and keeps things low-key, but she finds it difficult to meet demand from customers who manage to find her despite not having a website and not sharing anything on social networks.
Her paintings use copper and aluminium wires without any additional colour. So her works mostly carry hues of black, pink, orange, dark brown and white. Each painting fetches around $2,000 and can go up to $4,000.
Phuong’s second painting sold for VNĐ15 million ($660). Both her professional and social work are inspired by the Buddha. |
Sharing success
Her unprecedented success has not shifted her focus from wanting to help others.
“As demand is already more than supply, I have been giving special attention to a project where I will train disabled people so that they can make these copper wire paintings and earn a living.
“The project will be launched by April 16. I have already contacted a local facility for the disabled and asked them to select five people to join the project.”
“I want to help the poor, especially disabled people as they are marginalised in society, and face many disadvantages in life. You know the saying, ‘Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day, teach a man to fish and you feed him for a lifetime,’ I want to teach them how to fish.”
Some investors have offered her money to develop and expand the business, but Phuong has declined, wanting to reserve the skill for disadvantaged people.
“People without disabilities have many more opportunities out there to work. So I will reserve this craft for those with disabilities. I will train them group by group. Those who acquire this craft can pass it down to others and gradually they will be able to have a stable life.
“When our business develops more and our products reach international markets, they will realise the value.
“The core message is that those without a background in art, just like me, can still make art and reach the world through their artwork.”
Feeding orphans
Besides the training project, Phuong is also running a “Kitchen” project, in which she and her friends provide nutritious meals for children in orphanages.
“Meals for these children, which is only around VND5.000 (less than 25 US cents), don’t provide necessary nutrients,” said Phuong.
She is calling for funds for the project and has undertaken frequent travels throughout Viet Nam, mostly to remote areas in the Central Highlands province of Dak Lak, Gia Lai or the northern province of Lao Cai to give poor kids commodities, talking to them and teaching them life skills.
“My training and experience as a teacher gives me valuable skills for these field trips,” said Phuong.
“Business is busy, but I will continue my social projects, going to different corners of the country to talk and share with disadvantaged people first-hand.”
VNS
related news |