Driftwood sculpture pieces go on display in Germany

Miscellaneous

A 20-piece collection of driftwood sculptures will be displayed at the Hoi An Garden in Wernigerode, Germany, a sister city of Hoi An, during the third ‘lantern festival’ in Wernigerode on August 24-27 in celebration of the 10th anniversary of the friendship of the two cities (2013-2023) and to promote the ‘green’ growth cooperation of the two cities.

Director of the city’s Information and Sports Centre Truong Thi Ngoc Cam said the festival will be an annual cultural exchange programme of the two cities, and it aims to introduce the traditional culture, crafts, art performances, eco-tourism and heritage of Hoi An in Germany.

This year will mark the 10th anniversary of the friendship of the two cities (2013-2023) and promote ‘green’ growth cooperation by decorating lanterns in the streets of Wernigerode, art performances, a lantern-making skills demonstration, calligraphy and other hand-made trades of Hoi An.

The Hoi An Garden is built at the Miniaturen Park ‘Kleiner Harz’ in Wernigerode, while an eco-road or ‘green canopy’ street will be developed in Hai Bà Trung Street in Hoi An for the occasion.

Le Ngoc Thuan, the founder of driftwood village studio in Hoi An, said the 20-piece firewood sculpture collection, which was chosen from more than 100 sculptures, had been transformed from firewood and debris into stunning sculptures and interior decorations by carpenters of Kim Bong carpentry village in Hoi An.

He said the sculpture collection features the traditional craft skills of Hoi An, while boosting innovation and recycling to protect the environment for sustainable development.

Thuan said the studio, the first firewood recycling space in Hoi An, in Cam Ha commune, has been a rendezvous for tourists and sculpture lovers.

Most of the sculpture pieces were created from wood that had drifted onto Cua Dai Beach during the annual flood, and include sculptures of cats, buffalo, and the Japanese bridge – an iconic symbol of Hoi An – or Co Tu ethnic group designs, he added.

Cultural exchange events have been organised in both cities as part of annual cooperation programmes. In 2019, Hoi An artisans also joined the ‘lantern night’ festival in the old streets of Wernigerode, while the German Beer festival was held in Hoi An.

The German city helped develop a solar-powered system for public lighting, loudspeakers and lanterns in Hoi An in 2018, before sending a donation of 23,600 EUR (more than 23,000 USD) to support flood and storm victims in Hoi An.

Hoi An – the UNESCO-recognised World Heritage Site – has been building a dossier for recognition from the UNESCO’s Creative Cities Network (UCCN).

The tourism hub in central Vietnam had been using straws, containers and souvenirs from bamboo and reeds, and promoting the use of reusable bags and the ‘Say No to Single-Use Plastics’ campaign.

Hoi An and Wernigerode were recognised with a German Sustainability Award 2019 by the German Federal Government.

The ancient town, which had launched the ‘Establishing Comprehensive Bicycle Plan and Free/Low-cost Bicycle Sharing Programme project’ proposed by HeathBridge Vietnam with funding from the German development agency (GIZ), received the Global Urban Mobility Challenge Award of the Transformative Urban Mobility Initiative in Leipzig, Germany.

It also plans to provide 100,000 bicycles for residents in order to become the first eco-city in Vietnam.

Hoi An was chosen for the 2013 Townscape Award by the UN-Habitat Regional Office in Asia, while the city’s Hoai River and its canals featured in the list of the 10 most-famous canals in the world by the US-based travel website www.touropia.com in 2014.

Covering an area of 60sq.km, the tourist hub now has 22.5sq.km covered with farms and forests and 11sq.km filled with lakes and canals./.

Source: Vietnam News Agency