Viet Nam News
Le Huong
Choosing a high peak looking over a wild flower field, opening his painting shelf, the artist watches the scenery to choose what to paint.
The paper flaps in the wind and leaves wrap around his legs.
Taking a deep breath, Thai painter Ekachai Luadsoongnern takes some pictures of the landscape by camera before putting his first strokes on the paper.
From time to time, dust and grass blown by the wind sticks to the paper, or insects lose their way and fall on the paper.
“I leave them all there as a part of the real nature kept in my work,” he told Viet Nam News.
First arriving to Viet Nam’s central region 10 years ago, Luadsoongnern was inspired by the peaceful landscape.
Since June 2018, has travelled through the north of Viet Nam from the mountainous provinces of Ha Giang to the central province of Binh Dinh in an exchange project initiated by 333 Gallery in Bangkok and some Vietnamese painters.
In Ha Noi, he was impressed by the big trees and the light and shadow created by the sun.
“I find light is like young generation while shadow like elder one,” he said. “The shadow hides itself and serves as the background for the light. The same as elder generation support young generation. That’s what happening in your country now. Viet Nam’s economics grow very fast with the mutual supports among generations.”
More than 40 paintings, mostly oil-on-canvas, are displayed in an exhibition titled Viet Nam Light from the Shadow at Exhibition House 29 Hang Bai Street, as a result of his 10 months working in Viet Nam.
“He doesn’t mind taking all his heavy tools to draw in nature,” said painter Pham Huy Thong, who has hosted Luadsoongnern during his stay in Ha Noi.
“He is very friendly and can get along well with strange people very soon.
“I’m also a painter but when I work, I just want to be alone in my studio while he can make friends with a lot of people very quickly even at work.”
Thong said Luadsoongnern’s paintings follow the impressionism and expressionism styles.
Painter Bang Lam, former deputy chairman of the Viet Nam Fine Arts Association, was impressed with Luadsoongnern’s paintings.
“He directly paints at the site so he catches the soul of the site in his paintings,” Lam said.
“Through his frame, I found Ha Noi’s sunlight so beautiful and romantic running through big trees to create light areas at parks and streets.
“His paintings contain reality with beauty and soul.
“I just wonder how a foreigner can draw Ha Noi so beautiful,” Lam said.
Lam also commented that the paintings show a Viet Nam with hospitability, peace and economic growth.
“There are very few painters that paint right at the site in Viet Nam,” Lam said. “In his paintings, the old trees are so realistic that audience may feel as if they could touch the rough bark.
“Now many Vietnamese painters follow surrealism and abstract styles but I think painters who follow realism and put their emotions into their work can still touch their audience’s heart,” Lam said.
Researcher Nguyen Duc Tien, who graduated from Sotheby’s Institute of Art in New York, said he was impressed with Luadsoongnern’s paintings on Eo Gio, a strait by the sea in the central province of Binh Dinh.
“He fluently applied drawing techniques of noted painter (Claude) Monet like in Monet’s painting The Rock of Belle-Ile (1886),” Tien said.
“Green covers all 40 paintings by Luadsoongnern,” Tien said. “His green colour has reached painting technique as mentioned by (Joseph) Inguimberty, who implied that any green on pallet is acid and that green colours in nature mingle with one another.”
Luadsoongnern said he was impressed most with Ha Giang’s landscapes and ethnic minority people. When travelling to Ha Giang, Luadsoongnern stayed with local people.
"Thanks to the friendliness of locals in Ha Giang, I painted more beautifully with more emotions," he said.
“I saw a lot of weddings, where people dress colourfully,” he said. “Both local culture and nature are well preserved, while the place is not so far from the capital.”
A graduate of Silpakorn University’s Faculty of Drawing, Sculpture and Graphics, Luadsoongnern focuses on painting landscapes through oil-on-canvas and water colours. For the past 35 years, he has travelled to the US, Europe and Asia to draw.
His exhibition in Hang Bai Street will run till Saturday before being moved to Bangkok.
Luadsoongnern’s project in Viet Nam has been supported by Thai collector Tira Vanictheeranont, who own 333 Gallery in Bangkok. — VNS