The photographer has been living in Hoi An over the past six years.

The exhibition began on July 1 and will run for two months at Nguyen Phuc Chu street on An Hoi Island.

Through a selection of 40 photographs, echoing his museum, Réhahn shows how rich and diverse Vietnam’s ethnic culture is. His famous portraits of young children and old women from all provinces across the country represent from large ethnic communities with hundreds of thousands of members to small ones that have just a few hundreds, such as the O Du group, which required him to wait for three years to get authorization to visit them in their remote villages.

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A woman in Sa Pa - a photo taken by Réhahn

Posing in their traditional costumes, they symbolize ancestral customs that are handed down on from one generation to another, the challenge of protecting them, and the hope of keeping these communities alive.

The Precious Heritage collection promotes the beauty and pride of these communities that together form the great mosaic of Vietnam’s nationalities.

Réhahn believes that the “most efficient way to preserve the ethnic culture of the ethnic groups is to promote them outside their community, to create a sense of pride for their heritage and ancient customs. Sometimes, you need someone else’s vision to make you realize what you have.”

That, he says, is what motivated him to establish the Precious Heritage Art Gallery Museum (located at 26 Phan Boi Chau street in Hoi An) in January this year. By charging no entry fee and displaying everything with text in Vietnamese, English and French, the photographer hopes that the maximum number of people will use the opportunity to explore this side of Vietnam’s identity, and see what’s beyond the more obvious images.

Source: VNA