In Prague, a large exhibition of Rufina Baslovo, an artist from Grodno, living in the Czech Republic, opened up in Prague. After protests in Belarus in 2020, she began to tell the stories of arrested and political prisoners in an unusual way, using the traditional Belarusian embroidery. In five years, her personal art-activist gesture became an international project involving people from different parts of the world.
This story is only covered by news sources that have yet to be evaluated by the independent media monitoring agencies we use to assess the quality and reliability of news outlets on our platform. Learn more here.
In Prague, a large exhibition of Rufina Baslovo, an artist from Grodno, living in the Czech Republic, opened up in Prague. After protests in Belarus in 2020, she began to tell the stories of arrested and political prisoners in an unusual way, using the traditional Belarusian embroidery. In five years, her personal art-activist gesture became an international project involving people from different parts of the world.