Facing forward: Cabramatta High School students Mom Prak, Vanna Heng and Bing Mo display Vanna's work before it was sent off to the Board of Studies for marking. Picture: Wesley Lonergan
24/09/2008
BY KATHERINE FENECH
Fairfield City Champion (Australia)
All Vanna Heng needed to create her HSC artwork was paper, a stick and a jar of ink.
The end result was a series of pieces depicting faces from Vanna's point of view.
They will soon be sent off for marking by the Board of Studies, but they were also part of Cabramatta High School's Bodies of Work art exhibition.
Vanna Heng, 21, of Fairfield Heights, migrated to Australia from Cambodia with her family four years ago.
''I want to say thank you to my teacher for helping us achieve our goals,'' she said.
Mom Prak, 22, who migrated from Cambodia in 2003, went down a different path.
She designed a children's book called Wolf.
''It's about a rabbit that went along to the library to borrow a book,'' she said.
Bing Mo's work is a busy piece called Where is My Pencil? that illustrates the inside of an artist's studio.
It has been described as a ''mammoth work'' and captures the surroundings of an artist whose work has spilled over into everyday life.
All three of the students received top marks of 50 out of 50 for their artworks from the school.
The end result was a series of pieces depicting faces from Vanna's point of view.
They will soon be sent off for marking by the Board of Studies, but they were also part of Cabramatta High School's Bodies of Work art exhibition.
Vanna Heng, 21, of Fairfield Heights, migrated to Australia from Cambodia with her family four years ago.
''I want to say thank you to my teacher for helping us achieve our goals,'' she said.
Mom Prak, 22, who migrated from Cambodia in 2003, went down a different path.
She designed a children's book called Wolf.
''It's about a rabbit that went along to the library to borrow a book,'' she said.
Bing Mo's work is a busy piece called Where is My Pencil? that illustrates the inside of an artist's studio.
It has been described as a ''mammoth work'' and captures the surroundings of an artist whose work has spilled over into everyday life.
All three of the students received top marks of 50 out of 50 for their artworks from the school.
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