Showing posts with label Laval. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Laval. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Exhibition focuses on ever-changing Indochina

Everyday people: An image by Sebastien Laval displayed in the exhibition Communities Through Time.

Everyday people: An image by Sebastien Laval displayed in the exhibition Communities Through Time.

HA NOI — A photo exhibition by French photographer Sebastien Laval, entitled Communities Through Time, has opened at L'Espace, the French cultural centre in Ha Noi.

The black-and-white photos portray the life and culture of people in the central province of Thua Thien-Hue, as well as Cambodia's Angkor Wat and Luang Prabang in Laos. Laval's treatment of floating houses, flickering cooking fires, the innocent smiles of kids, the austere expression on the face of an ethnic man, or a tobacco pipe between a woman's lips, captures the enigma that endures in this region.

The photos include portraits and depict both traditional customs and changes in people's lives. Images in opposition, such as traditional clothes and satellite dishes, old roofs and asphalt roads, reflect the changes in the lives of the ethnic people. The images have no titles, allowing the viewer to freely think, feel and discover the characters, to "try to meet them, talk to them, look at them and understand them," Laval said.

"The way I take photos is not to tell people that I am taking photos," Laval said. "I make no arrangement for the images."

One morning, Laval said he came to a Lao village and met a young girl carrying her brother in front of her house. By the afternoon, she had become acquainted with Laval, who was able to capture a photo of her sitting on sand with a radiant smile.

"If I hadn't come closer to her, I wouldn't have had that smile," he said. "I realised that people still speak and have a mutual understanding even if they don't use the same language."

Born in 1973, Laval discovered photography when he was given a camera by his father. He moved to Paris to work as an assistant for a photo studio in 1992 and subsequently began working as a professional in Poitiers.

Laval visited Viet Nam for the first time in 1995 and has accumulated thousands of images of people in about 20 Vietnamese ethnic groups, which he intends to publish in a book.

The current exhibition runs through February 11 at L'Espace, 24 Trang Tien Street, in Ha Noi. — VNS

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Wednesday, January 19, 2011

French monochrome photos connect communities

HA NOI – A photo exhibition by French professional Sebastien Laval, entitled Communities through Time, will open tonight in Ha Noi.

The black-and-white photos tell stories of the lives of ethnic people in three countries: Cambodia, Laos and Viet Nam.

Through the photos, Laval shows portraits, traditional customs and changes in people's lives. Without titles, visitors could think, feel and freely discover the characters, "try to meet them, talk to them, look at them and understand them", Laval said.

Born on March 11, 1973, in Alfortville, Laval discovered photography when he was given a black-and-white camera by his father. He moved to Paris to work as an assistant for a photo studio in 1992 and cultivated his knowledge by studying black-and-white photos. He began working as a professional in Poitiers.

Laval visited Viet Nam for the first time in 1995 and is acclaimed by Vietnamese and tourists for his outstanding and lively views.

The exhibition runs until February 11 at L'Espace, the French Cultural Centre, Trang Tien Street.

Ha Noi-based music academy students to perform in HCM City

HCM CITY — The HCM City Ballet and Symphony Orchestra (HBSO) will present a concert featuring Vietnamese students from the Ha Noi-based Viet Nam National Academy of Music (VNAM) at the Opera House tomorrow.

The concert will open with a performance by Do Hoang Linh Chi, who won first prize in a piano contest at the 2009 ASEAN International Competition in Jakarta, Indonesia.

HBSO conductor Nguyen Anh Son, a graduate of Tchaikovsky Moscow State Conservatory in Opera and Symphonic Conducting, will lead the performance.

Renowned violinist Bui Cong Duy will play the Concerto Grosso for Violin, Piano, Percussion and String Orchestra by Nguyen Manh Duy Linh, who has an MA in composition from Russia's Magnitogorsk State Conservatory.

Chorus master Tran Nhat Minh, a graduate of Russia's Tchaikovsky Conservatory, will wield the baton.

The show will open at 8pm on January 19 at the HCM City Opera House, 7 Lam Son Square, District 1.

Tickets cost VND150,000-VND250,000 and are available at the theatre.

Project promotes youth's awareness of reproductive health

HA NOI — The Rutgers Nisso Groep (RNG) and World Population Fund (WPF) have formed a new organisation to promote sexual and reproductive heath for young people.

Through the Rutgers WPF projects, young people will be able to exercise their creativity to express their thoughts on the issues of sexual and reproductive heath and rights through such artforms as mime, painting, fashion, dance and drama.

The WPF has been active in Viet Nam since 1995, connecting with young people to address such issues as the stigma surrounding HIV/AIDS. The Netherlands-based RNG has focused on research, knowledge transfer and developing and implementing effective and innovative interventions in sex education and counselling.

Rutgers WPF representative Jerry Clewett said that if sexual and reproductive rights are realised, "then we can enter a happier world where there are less unplanned pregnancies, less abortions, less discrimination against people living with HIV and greater understanding by the youth of their sexuality." — VNS

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Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Monochrome photos connect communities

HA NOI – A photo exhibition by French professional Sebastien Laval, entitled Communities through Time, will open this evening in Ha Noi.

The black-and-white photos tell stories of the lives of ethnic people in three countries: Cambodia, Laos and Viet Nam.

Through the photos, Laval shows portraits, traditional customs and changes in people's lives. Without titles, visitors could think, feel and freely discover the characters, "try to meet them, talk to them, look at them and understand them", Laval said.

Born on March 11, 1973, in Alfortville, Laval discovered photography when he was given a black-and-white camera by his father. He moved to Paris to work as an assistant for a photo studio in 1992 and cultivated his knowledge by studying black and white photos. He began working as a professional in Poitiers City.

Laval visited Viet Nam for the first time in 1995 and is acclaimed by Vietnamese and tourists for his outstanding and lively views.

The exhibition runs until February 11 at L'Espace, the French Cultural Centre, Trang Tien Street. – VNS

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