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KVT – Art Vietnam……The Second Decade

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The self portraits by Nguyen Van Phuc

Nguyen Van Phuc Imagination

Nguyen Van Phuc The inheritor

Nguyen Thi Chinh Le’s very delicate, yet intense, silk paintings and associated, small bronze sculptures

Nguyen Thi Chinh Le Emotion 2008

those strong feminist carved wood print blocks and deep and dark self portraits by Ly Tran Quynh Giang

Ly Tran Quynh Giang woodcut

Ly Tran Quynh Giang woodcut

Nguyen Quang Huy’s misty blue peaens of love for the ethnic women in Ha Giang’s rocky reaches

Nguyen Quang Huy Love 2011

Le Quoc Viet’s calligraphic ceramic installations

Le Quoc Viet ceramic plates

the mature, mellow, glowing canvasses of Nguyen Cam

Nguyen Cam Traces 2010

nom script flowing like black and white eddies from the brushes of the Gang of Five

Zenei

and the billowing stripes in Nguyen The Son’s innovative New Higher Level silk painting series.

Nguyen The Son New Higher Level

To wander the auxiliary galleries up and down and around the stairs was always tantalizing – catching glimpses of the work of some of other artists in the Art Vietnam stable of talent. Perhaps a few of Dinh Cong Dat’s whimsical school kid sculptures

Dinh Cong Dat schoolboy schoolgirl

or the students squashed into blocks by Pham Ngoc Duong

Pham Ngoc Duong Highschool Boy IX

Pham Ngoc Duong Highschool Boy IX

amazing surreal jet planes by Nguyen Manh Hung

Nguyen Manh Hung 2004 Untitled

elaborate and intricate woodblocks by Pham Cam Thuong

Phan Cam Thuong A human chess game

Phan Cam Thuong Of the last quarter Moon

a couple of lacquers by Diep Quy Hai or Mac Dac Linh

Diep Quy Hai Year of the Chicken III

Mai Dac Linh The Quiet Time #48

or the often candy colored wall sculptures by Kim Tran that always push my happiness buttons

Kim Tran sculpture

Not that Art Vietnam was a new comer to Hanoi’s art scene in 2007. It had started its career five years earlier in 2002, not too far away at 30 Hang Than, in one of the most peaceful tunnel houses you’re ever likely to encounter.

Art Vietnam Hang Than

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2 COMMENTS

  1. Thanks KVT – this is a nice piece. Like you, I was disappointed when I heard the Nguyen Khac Nhu gallery was closing – it’s a great building with it’s secret staircases and big airy rooms – but more so because it housed Viet Art’s excellent collections and exhibitions so well – they deserved a good setting. I particularly liked Simon Redington’s print folios and Ly Tran Quynh Giang’s wood blocks. Seeing your photographs of some of those works reminded me how lucky we were to have Viet Art. It would’ve been a shame if we’d lost it completely – so thank you Suzanne – I’m looking forward to any future exhibitions in the new setting.

  2. Really enjoyed and appreciated this article – thank you.

    Suzanne’s past and ongoing contribution to the development and increased international exposure of the Vietnamese contemporary art scene has been enormous – she is a treasure – as is her showcase home.

    Andrew FitzGerald

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