Art Articles
A GLIMPSE OF CONTEMPORARY VIETNAMESE ART
By Art Critic Duong Tuong, 2000
It is not very long since Vietnamese art in general and contemporary Vietnamese
art in particular emerged from unrecognition - I'd rather say anonymity - to have
its say on the world's art scene. For a long period, scholars and researchers in
the West were prone to dismiss Vietnamese culture as a wan replica of Chinese or
a mishmash of French-Chinese-Indian cultures. That VietNam owes much to those great
civilizations iscundeniable, but it in no way means that Vietnamese culture is a
mere pro-duct of mimicry. It is safe to say that what has enabled Viet Nam to survive
as anation through an aggregate thousand-odd years of foreign domination is that
she has known how to digest foreign influences and incorporate their quintessence
into her own culture.
In these days, wnen people are speaking of an identity crisis in Asian art, Vietnamese
art has become a center of attraction. Indeed, Vietnamese art works, in the last
decade, have been increasingly sought after by foreign collectors and art lovers.
Exhibitions of contemporary Vietnamese art organised in Hong Kong, Singapore, Japan,
Australia, F rance, Germany, Great Britain, Belgium, Swizerland, Sweeden, Norway,
Denmark, Holland, the USA, Argentina...have commanded attention and acclaim.
Indeed, the art scene here is showing such a brimming vitality and explosive diversity
as could never be seen in the past.The current blooming of Vietnamese art springs
from our earnest urge toward self-affirmation as a culture with its own unmistakable
identity and can be interpreted as the tumultuous release of long-suppressed of
creatuve desires. This is a time of change and I'd rather lay emphasis on the younger
generation. Vietnamese artists have now become more exploratory and go-ahead, trying
to attune themselves to international trends as they are enjoying the benefits of
artistic freedom of expression in the salutary climate of doi moi. A powerful upsurge
of new art forms and revitalized traditions are moving Vietnamese art forward. Young
artists are seeking their hallmarks based on their own experience and personal vision,
increasingly showing self-confidence and audacity in their work. Theirs is a generation
without complxes. They are not overawed by what their elders had done in their capacity
as pioneers, nor do they attempt to make tabula rasa of the past. While doing their
best to wed tradition with modernity, they are in no way traditionalistic, well
aware as they are that tradutons can sometimes become impeding and conducive to
conservatism.
Of this young generation, the first group to gain international renownby their works
is the Gang of Five, composed of five Hanoi painters:Hong Viet Dung, Ha Tri Hieu,
Dang Xuan Hoa, Tran Luong and Pham Quang Vinh.Concurrently rising to prominence
are such artists as Tran Trong Vu, Hoang Hong Cam, Nguyen Than, Bui Minh Dung, Le
Quang Ha, exponents of a robust neo-expressionist trend. Among the foremost adepts
in abstractionism, are Nguyen Trung, Do Hoang Tuong, Tran Van Thao. Do Minh Tam,
Tran Luong, Le Hong Thai...The romantic-minded Nguyen Thanh Binh and Pham Luan charm
with their sunny palettes and enchanting lyricism. Such cutting-edge art forms as
performance and installation begin to be explored and are no longer unfamiliar to
the public. The iconoclast Truong Tan turns a corner from orthodoxyby producing
most unconventional works straightforwardly expressing his gay convictions. Nguyen
Bao Toan, Nguyen Minh Thanh in Ha Noi and Le Thua Tien in Hue are among the first
"engagÐ" installation artists to produce in Viet Nam. Mention should
be made of Vu Dan Tan the Sorcerer who turns castoffs into art works, the minimalist
Le Thiet Cuong,the unclassifiable Dinh Y Nhi with her hallucinatory black-and-white
paintings, the instinctive Vu Thang with his compelling use of mixed media in lacquer
painting....
Indeed, it is this complex-free generation that is setting the tone for the future
of Vietnamee art. They do not content themselves with fo;;owing up traditions. They
are fashioning a new vision that keeps drawing substance from national roots and
are accordingly creating a new tradition - the tradition of the New.
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