Viet Nam News
By Bui Hoai Nam
Pham Van Thien, the leader of a volunteer team from Da Nang Technology College and other institutions has created art spaces for more than 100 cafes and bars in the central city since his first year studying at the college.
The group of artists has successfully transformed the walls of houses, cafes and restaurants into colourful stories, telling visitors the histories of the locations or depicting the city’s landscapes.
The art spaces present the lives of the local community, helping decorate a lively rendezvous for youngsters and tourists.
Creating colourful murals on moss-covered walls has helped students hone their skills on top of lectures at college, while offering them some income to live on.
“We started painting murals for cafes, restaurants, bars and private houses in Da Nang. The paintings are an impressive attraction for young people when they want to relax and chat over a cup of coffee or tea. Colourful murals become popular, and news of a new work will spread quickly through word of mouth,” Thien said.
“Oil and acrylic paint are the materials we use for all our paintings. We come up with the themes based on conversations with the cafe owners or inspiration we get while working,” he explained.
Thien’s group of four friends and classmates at the college’s architecture faculty often work in groups to complete the painting.
“Our group could spend a week on a large mural of 100sq.m. There needs to be good co-ordination between us when we share ideas and match colours,” he said.
Each work on their own part of the painting before matching it to the larger mural. The ’artists’ discuss the work to make sure their individual parts work together as a whole.
Nguyen Xuan Hau, 21, said the group had worked on a number of topics, like the story of Aladdin, still life, landscapes along the Han River or picturesque scenes in Da Nang.
“We completed a big wall painting on Ka Cong Cafe of an old image of Da Nang. The painting was based on an old black and white photo of the city from the 1960s,” Hau said.
Young students enjoyed drinking tea or coffee at the cafe while looking at images of their city from the past.
Hau explained that the income they received from the paintings helped them pay for college fee, while offering them a chance to improve their skills and knowledge.
“We love painting, but we are working to become architects and designers. That’s our future career, so we need time to hone our abilities.”
The owner of a cafe in Da Nang, Tran Thanh Lam, said he asked the painting team to draw a scene of an old corner of the city on a wall.
He said "Young people now live in a modern city, but they could still appreciate images of the city from the 1960s".
Thien and his volunteer team also created 20 colourful murals on moss-covered walls in a village on Tam Hai Island, off the coast of Quang Nam Province.
The voluntary programme aims to raise awareness among local residents on environmental and beach protection through art.
The murals remind local residents not to throw rubbish on the beach or at public sites.
Murals have emerged as a new artistic style in central Viet Nam after old houses in Tam Thanh fishing village of Quang Nam were decorated with colourful paintings by the Korea Foundation Community Art Exchange Programme in 2016.
The wall painting projects were then repeated in rural areas on An Binh Islet, in Da Nang, and at a village in Binh Son District of Quang Ngai Province.
Thien said his group will continue creating murals at eco-tour sites and public areas around Da Nang and neighbouring provinces.— VNS