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Friday, 19/10/2018 17:03

Art exhibition raises money for poor women

Bright: Diva by Tran Vu Hoang.
Viet Nam News

Teachers Nguyen Thi Thuy Huong and her friend Tran Vu Hoang both have a passion for the arts. In honour of this year’s Vietnamese Women’s Day, the artists will be auctioning off some of their works to help women undergoing hemodialysis. Ha Nguyen reports.

“Em… particularly women and girls who are unlucky or facing difficulties in life, were the main source of inspiration for our paintings,” said Nguyen Thi Thuy Huong, who is a teacher at a primary school in Ha Noi.

Huong and her friend Tran Vu Hoang, who is deputy head of the Ha Noi College of Art, said although their regular jobs were at school, they were interested in fine arts, respecting beauty and values of human culture.

An exhibition entitled ‘Em…’ displaying more than 60 works by Huong and Hoang, which is being held in Ha Noi from October 17-21, received a lot of interest from the public, including painters and art researchers.

An auction will be held at the exhibition. All money from the auction of two oil paintings entitled Em…(size 120cm by 90cm) and Ngam…(90cm by 90cm) will be donated to disadvantaged women undergoing hemodialysis treatment at Bach Mai Hospital in Ha Noi on the occasion of Vietnamese Women’s Day, October 20, said Huong.

Tran Khanh Chuong, chairman of the Viet Nam Fine Arts Association, said visiting the exhibition, viewers would see clearly about the contrast between oil painting and lacquer painting of these two painters.
 
“The two teachers-painters have expressed their own impression and inspiration through their works. Their style of painting would effect and help increase creativeness among their students and the young generation as well,” Chuong told the opening ceremony in Ha Noi on Wednesday.
 
He also praised their ideas of auctioning their paintings to donate to female hemodialysis patients, saying its a very good example for other painters to follow.

Huong was born in the midland province of Vinh Phuc’s Huong Canh Town, which is home to a famous hundred-year old pottery village. As a child, Huong spent a lot of her time creating toys and items out of clay, like bowls, plates, pots and characters from children’s tales.

“Although I had a passion for fine arts, my mother forced me to study pedagogy. Now my main career is teaching, but I love art so much I try to spend most of my free time painting, because it helps me express my feelings and relax,” Huong said.

Beginning an art career in 2009, Huong said she invested all her confidence in her work. One of her favourite pieces is the oil painting Ba Ke Con Nghe, depicting a businessman, the paternal grandchild of Viet Nam’s late general Vo Nguyen Giap, telling his first daughter about the historic triumph at the Dien Bien Phu battle, commanded by her grandfather.

Nature: Ngu Hanh (metal, wood, water, fire and earth) by painter Vu Hoang.
Youth: A little girl in the ’Em...’ collection by Thuy Huong.
Elegant: A woman from Hue by Huong.

“The work tells the young generation to always remember the merits of our forefathers and national traditions,” said Huong, adding that she was fond of another oil work named Ngam. The work depicts a woman from Hue with a relaxed face, wearing elegant violet long robe and a traditional conical hat. Her hand is resting on a pile of books.

“The message I wish to convey is that women, in any circumstances, who are interested in reading books and accumulating knowledge to improve herself, are the real representation of beauty,” she said. 

Apart from these paintings, Huong has captured the beauty of both Ha Long Bay, a world heritage site, and a female golfer. “I want to say that women, rich or poor, should choose a suitable sport to practise every day to be healthy and confident in daily life.”

But Huong said her favourite painting was Em…in which a Vietnamese girl wears a violet long robe, holding a traditional hat in her hand. Her hair is loose down her back, revealing her pretty face. She is standing on the threshold, considering how to step down.

“I want to express the message that if a woman meets a gentleman, she should consider marrying him. If she doesn’t meet such a good man, she should turn away and be confident enough to be single without trying to force an attachment with someone unsuitable,” said Huong.

Meanwhile, Hoang, 58, developed an interest in painting as a teenager and won third prize at an art contest. He began to pursue a career in art in 1979. At his first exhibition in 1980, he sold several of his paintings, including two bought by the National Museum of Arts for display.

He later enrolled at the Ha Noi University of Fine Arts (1983-88) and later worked at the Ha Noi Art College from 1991 until now.

“My painting career really started in 1996. Myself and painter Vu Thang opened our own studio at home to paint large abstract landscape lacquer works under the theme of ’Oriental philosophy’, such as a collection of five basic elements (metal, wood, water, fire and earth),” Hoang said.

By 2002, Hoang was invited by the city of Veigne in France to display 20 of his lacquer paintings. “More than half of my works were sold at this exhibition,” he said.

Years later, he began to paint realistic works on nationality and women.

“Lacquer techniques inspired me so much. For example, beauty only appears during the process of painting with lacquer, and then I add individual elements of colour. The most important part is how to choose materials to improve the painting. The painting process only ends when the painter’s eyes are pleased,” Hoang said.

He said he was interested in the abstract painting collection (locally known as Kim-Moc-Thuy-Hoa-Tho or Metal, Wood, Water, Fire and Earth).

He has attended many exhibitions in and outside the country including Viet Nam Modern Painting in Beijing, China (2005), Dual Game 2008 in Seoul, South Korea, Bienalle in Venice, Italy (2013), and Viet Nam-South Korea Lacquer Painting (2017). VNS


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