from the Cambodia Daily, December 15, 2003
Reyum Institute Wins Award
From Dutch Government
by Michelle
Vachon
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HE Ambassador Gerard Kramer handing
the award plaque to Ingrid Muan and Ly Daravuth,
Co-directors of Reyum. |
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Last June, Gerard Kramer, the Bangkok-based Dutch ambassador to
Cambodia, Laos, Thailand and Vietnam, toured the Reyum Institute
of Arts and Culture in Phnom Penh. As he walked through the Institute's
art school, gallery and research office, he asked questions without
explaining his presence, co-Director Ingrid Muan said. "We
wondered what he really wanted," she said. A clue came in September,
when Reyum was told it would receive the 2003 Prince Claus Award.
But it was only at an award ceremony in Phnom Penh last week that
the Iinstitute learned why it had been selected as one of the 11
cultural organizations in the world to receive the Dutch prize.
Named after the deceased husband of Queen Beatrix, the Prince Claus
awards are presented to artists, thinkers and organizations for
exceptional achievement in cultural activities and development,
Kramer said at a ceremony at the Hotel Cambodiana on Thursday. As
he mentioned in his speech, Kramer had been asked to look into two
organizations identified by the selection committee as possible
award recipients in Southeast Asia. Both were in Cambodia. Dutch
officials on Thursday would not reveal the name of the other organization,
which was not chosen as an award winner.
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The
co-directors with some of the staff of Reyum. |
'The welcome [at Reyum] was a great surprise," Kramer said.
"I was received by dozens of children proudly presenting their
paintings," which were their own interpretations of an old
Cambodian tale, he said. "In a country where already so much
has been lost due to the cruelties of the past," the institute's
efforts to research, document and pass on Cambodia's cultural identity
to future generations is crucial, he said.
The Prince Claus Award was created in 1996 to support culture,
especially in the developing countries of Africa, Asia, Latin America
and the Caribbean, Kramer said.
The prince, who had become inspector general for Dutch international
aid in the 1980s, was very interested in cultural exchange and development,
Kramer said. For the 2003 awards, the focus was put on organizations
involved in craft survival and innovation. This year's first prize,
which comes with a $122,120 grant, went to 89-year-old Wang Shi-xiang
for his research into China's popular culture and crafts. The 10
other winners include the District Six Museum in Cape Town, South
Africa; Yovita Meta and her Biboki weavers in West Timor, Indonesia;
and Carlinhos Brown, founder of the Pracatum Association in Brazil.
They each receive a $30,530 grant. Co-directed by Muan and Ly Daravuth,
the Reyum Institute conducts research, holds exhibitions and publishes
books on Cambodian arts and architecture. More than 100 students,
orphans or from poor families, attend its free arts school.
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Guests at the award reception. On the right,
Bill Herod who provided Reyum with an exhibition space five
years ago.
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