A Neon Pink House Calls Out for a Brighter Future for Refugees

Artist, refugees cover house in crochet to bring attention to displaced women.

— -- Not everyone can live in a pink, fuzzy house but everyone should have a place to call home. This is the message of hope Polish artist Agata Oleksiak, also known as Olek, wishes to spread through her crocheted creations.

Olek's take is to gather volunteers, including Syrian and Ukrainian refugees, and cover a 100-year-old house with delicate crochet patterns made with neon pink yarn. "Women have the ability to recreate themselves. No matter how low life might bring us, we can get back on our feet and start anew," she told ABC News.

The artist originally created an exhibit in Avesta, Sweden, that showed the interiors of a house covered in crochet.

"However, when the Syrian and Ukrainian refugees who helped me install my piece started telling me the candid stories of their recent experiences and horrors of their home countries, I decided to blow up my crocheted house," she said.

Afterwards, she had a vision to send a positive message to the world and especially to displaced women. Out of this came the pink house.

"We live in challenging times, a changing world filled with conflict, wars and natural disasters. But I like to think that it's also a world filled with love," Olek said.

Our Pink House will be exhibited until the November opening of Olek's upcoming exhibition, Yarn Visions, in Kerava.