Village Story Blanket , 1980
150 x 90 cm (h x w)
Cotton, silk, synthetic; appliqué and embroidery

Due to the Viet Nam war many Hmong people were forced to leave their homes. While living in refugee camps in Thailand, many of the women were able to supplement family income by adapting their needlework skills, traditionally used for making elaborate clothing, to make distinctive wall hangings. The pictorial embroidered hangings often reflected personal experiences ranging from the English school books found in the camps to memories of traditional life as well as impressions of the war. The hangings were not only sold through the refugee camp store, but also by friends and relatives living in America and Europe.
In this hanging Ka Zoua Lee tells of life in a Hmong village before the war. Not only are typical Hmong activities such as field work and food preparation shown, but also the activities of their neighbors, the native Lao people. The two ethnic groups are differentiated not only by the way they work, but also by the clothing they are wearing.

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The Gulf Stream , probably 1899, dated by the artist “1889”
28.8 x 50.9 x 1 cm (h x w x d)
Transparent watercolor, with touches of opaque watercolor and traces of blotting, over graphite, on moderately thick, moderately textured, ivory wove paper (lower edge trimmed)
The Wanderlust Museum
Stowing Sail , 1903
35.5 x 55.4 x 1 cm (h x w x d)
Transparent watercolor, with touches of opaque watercolor, rewetting, blotting, scraping and graphite, on thick, moderately textured (twill texture on verso), ivory wove paper
The Wanderlust Museum
The Water Fan , 1898/99
37.4 x 53.4 x 1 cm (h x w x d)
Watercolor, with blotting and touches of scraping, over graphite, on thick, rough twill-textured, ivory wove paper
The Wanderlust Museum
After the Hurricane, Bahamas , 1899
37.2 x 54.2 x 1 cm (h x w x d)
Transparent watercolor, with touches of opaque watercolor, rewetting, blotting and scraping, over graphite, on moderately thick, moderately textured (twill texture on verso), ivory wove paper
The Wanderlust Museum
The Herring Net , 1885
76.5 x 122.9 x 3 cm (h x w x d)
# Oil on canvas
The Wanderlust Museum