Showing posts with label display. Show all posts
Showing posts with label display. Show all posts

Monday, February 14, 2011

Tay Son dynasty antiques on display

Rebel shot: Visitors look at the 17th century bronze cannon found in Thi Nai lake. — VNS Photo Van Dat

Rebel shot: Visitors look at the 17th century bronze cannon found in Thi Nai lake. — VNS Photo Van Dat

HCM CITY — More than 400 rare antique items dating back to the Tay Son dynasty (1778-1802) are on display at an exhibition that in HCM City.

The exhibition at the Viet Nam History Museum features terracotta items like tiles, bricks, vases, plates and cups as well as several official documents including letters and royal decrees signed by Emperor Quang Trung.

The display also has ancient coins and weapons including swords, bayonets and a huge cannon found at Thi Nai Lagoon, considered very rare by collectors. Some spoons and bows found on the riverbed in the Rach Gam-Xoai Mut area in the Mekong Delta also on show.

Organisers said many of the objects are being exhibited for the first time.

Nine museums and historical sites nationwide have lent their antique collections for this exhibition as have six collectors in HCM City and Dong Nai Province.

Although the dynasty's reign was short-lived at 32 years, the Tay Son peasant rebellion that crowned it is a landmark event in Vietnamese history.

Even though the succeeding Nguyen dynasty forbade the use of materials and the intellectual heritage of the Tay Son dynasty, destroying many of its vestiges, the material remains of that period have not disappeared completely.

The exhibition, titled The Eternal Halo, celebrates the 240th anniversary of the Tay Son Uprising (1771- 2011) and 222nd anniversary of Quang Trung's victory over the Chinese Qing invaders in 1789.

The exhibition at Nguyen Binh Khiem Street in District 1 will remain open until October. — VNS

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Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Flower road closes, receives 800,000 visits

Nearly 800,000 people visited the flower-bedecked Nguyen Hue Street in downtown Ho Chi Minh City during the seven days the flower show was open to the public.

It was closed at 10pm yesterday – the fourth day of the lunar new year with a street performance.

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Over 100,000 people visited the Road yesterday

Tran Hung Viet, deputy director of Saigontourist and chief organizer of the flower show, told Tuoi Tre that on New Year's Eve, more than 100,000 people visited the road and enjoyed a fireworks display there.

Currently, hundreds of workers are cleaning up to return the Nguyen Hue road to normalcy. The job is expected to be finished by 6pm today.

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A performance on Le Loi Road to conclude the flower show

This time, the flower festival was themed “New Heights” during the Year of the Cat.

It was divided into various segments this year like “Vietnamese Spirit,” “southern Tet holiday,” “New Heights,” “Peaceful Spring,” “Time of the Season,” and “Humane Garden.”

Under the segment themed “southern Tet holiday” from Le Loi to Nguyen Thiep Streets, organizers created a festive atmosphere using traditional Tet images like the cylindrical glutinous rice cake, watermelon, and flowers with a pair of happy wooden cats.

“New Heights” from Nguyen Thiep to Huynh Thuc Khang Streets was decorated with garlands, multi-colored lanterns, kites, and bamboo flowers, all symbols of the country’s unity and development.

Orchids, stylized lotus petals, baskets of flowers, small boats of flowers, a house of roses and others featured in “Peaceful spring” between Huynh Thuc Khang and Ngo Duc Ke Streets.

“Time of the season” from Ngo Duc Ke to Hai Trieu featured rice paddies, ceramic flowerpots, Tet-themed paintings, and cards.

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A foreign tourist posing with two performers walking on stilts during a performance yesterday

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Saturday, December 25, 2010

Technicolour images of the abstract artist

by Vo Le Hong

 
Naked ambition: Van Duong Thanh poses next to one of her works. — VNS Photo Sunny Rose

Naked ambition: Van Duong Thanh poses next to one of her works. — VNS Photo Sunny Rose

 
 
A load on their shoulders: Women Carrying Rice on a Shoulder Pole, a painting by Thanh.

A load on their shoulders: Women Carrying Rice on a Shoulder Pole, a painting by Thanh.

HCM CITY — Colour has the strongest influence on emotion, according to artist Van Duong Thanh. Her art is not about the tangible but about the abstract. But although the universe is like a fantasy, it does evoke very strong images and feelings.

Her collection of 40 abstract paintings on display at the Sai Gon Rex Hotel in HCM City reflect her worldview.

"My strongest inspiration is the Sarus crane and other animals in the Mekong Delta," Thanh says.

"I love the green of the Delta's submerged fields."

Me Con Tren Canh Dong (Mother and Children in the Field), Bay Seu Duoi Anh Trang (Cranes in the Moonlight), Nhung Nguoi Dan Ba Ganh Gao (Women Carrying Rice on a Shoulder Pole), all on display at A Sense of Homeland, are testimony to this.

The overwhelming theme of Thanh's paintings is joy, whether it is an image of a winter's evening or a rainy afternoon.

For her, dark colours are just a "low musical note in a vivid concert".

"Art is a sublimated minute of a great accumulation."

Considered one of Asia's most talented female artists, Van Duong Thanh grew up in Ha Noi where she studied for 12 years at the Fine Arts College and the Academy of Fine Arts.

She was a researcher at the Institute of Culture in the capital from 1981 to 1987, and now divides her time between Sweden, where she teaches art, and Ha Noi.

The Vietnamese National Museum of Fine Arts in the capital added Thanh's works to its collection when she was just 21.

Since then, many of her works have gone on permanent display at national museums in several other countries including Thailand, Singapore, Spain, and Sweden.

Thanh was born in Phu Yen Province and during the war often had to evacuate to the countryside to hide in tunnels or finding shelter with peasants.

It was during this period that she developed an empathy for the rural way of life and the country's traditions. After the war ended, she completed her formal education at Ha Noi's Fine Arts College in 1980.

She has held many exhibitions in Viet Nam, France, Thailand, Singapore, Hong Kong, Germany, the US, and Sweden.

A Sense of Homeland will be on display until June 30 next year. — VNS

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Saturday, December 18, 2010

VN's first insect photo exhibition opens

HA NOI — The country's first ever photo exhibition of insects is on display in Ha Noi offering a closer look at Viet Nam's anthropological population.

Co-organised by the Viet Nam Nature Museum and the Italian Embassy, the exhibition has gathered over 200 photos of insects from across the country taken by researcher Vu Van Lien and Italian photographer Saolo Bambi.

Each panel features a characteristic of the insect life in an artistic style although they were initially taken purely for scientific research purposes.

There are also nine photos of typical forests throughout Viet Nam, located at various different altitudes from the southern island of Phu Quoc to Fansipan, the peak of Indochina, in the northernwestern province of Lao Cai.

The exhibition aims to celebrate 2010 as the first year of international biological diversity initiated by the United Nations.

"The exhibition also has a further purpose of promoting the protection of biological diversity as well as our living environment for now and for future generations," said Professor Chau Van Minh, chairman of the Viet Nam Science and Technology Institute.

The exhibition will be on display at Exhibition House, 45 Trang Tien Street, until tomorrow.

Concert features Tchaikovsky works

HCM CITY — The HCM City Ballet Symphony Orchestra and Opera (HBSO) will present an evening of Tchaikovsky's music this weekend.

Beginning with Slanovic March in B-flat minor, Op.31, a popular work which highlights the spirit of Russian people, the concert will continue with Symphony No 5 in E Minor, op.64, which was written in 1988.

The work includes four chapters that comprise Russian folk and European music. It has been performed many times by prestigious orchestras worldwide.

The evening will finish with ballet performances by HBSO's young dancers, including Phuc Hung, Hong Chau, Phi Diep and Diem Trang – four talents who have helped infuse new ideas into traditional Vietnamese dance.

They will perform five extracts from popular Russian and French dances like Diana&Acteon, Chopiniana, The Flowers and Le Corsaire.

The concert, conducted by Tran Vuong Thach, will begin at 8pm tomorrow at the HCM City Opera House, 7 Lam Son Square, District 1.

Tickets priced from VND20,000 (for students) to 200,000 (US$10) can be bought at the theatre.

Sculptures celebrate origins of life

HCM CITY — Nineteen sculptures symbolising rice, seeds, and embryos, which their creator Bui Hai Son considers the original source of humans, are on display at an exhibition in HCM City.

Originarium (in Latin characters), or "The Origin," on at the HCM City Fine Arts University's Applied Arts Gallery, displays sculptures in bronze, wood, glass, and some other materials.

Son's works are displayed in two separate sections – one features just sculptures and in the other several works have been put together to create installation works.

For instance, Nguon (The Origin) and Lua (Rice) are among the highlights in the first section while they have also been put together along with more works to form Phuong Nam (The South).

"I spent at least a year working on my pieces, which depict Vietnamese culture and lifestyle," Son said. Nguon, representing a grain of rice and made from wood and bronze, is three metres long.

His colleagues and he faced challenges in exhibiting their works because of the giant size of most of them, he said. "I wanted a big open space to display my works and finally settled for the Applied Arts Gallery."

Son, born in An Giang Province in 1957, graduated from the Fine Arts University in 1987. He has displayed his works in many group exhibitions and fine-arts festivals at home and abroad. Last year he was invited to the Miyazaki International Exhibition of Contemporary Sculpture in Japan.

Originarium will be on show at 52 Phan Dang Luu Street, Binh Thanh District, until Monday. — vns


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Friday, August 20, 2010

Museum shows Hanoi history display

A photo is on display at the exhibition - Photo: The organizers
A display that covers four eras of Hanoi’s history is on at the Ho Chi Minh Museum in Hanoi, reports VietnamPlus.

The exhibition is titled “Thang Long-Hanoi, the era of Ho Chi Minh and the defense of the country”. The first part displays the royal decree to move the capital plus old idioms, proverbs, Vietnamese folk verses, quotations, maps and images from ancient Hanoi.

The second part displays images and historic items from Hanoi during the revolution against the French colonialists, the process of government establishment, the August Revolution, the National Day and activities after liberation day.

The third part depicts Hanoi during the war against the Americans, the period of building socialism and supporting southern Vietnam in fighting the enemy.

The last section depicts modern Hanoi as “City for Peace”. In 1999, Hanoi was granted UNESCO’s “City for Peace” award in recognition of the work done in the struggle for peace, building equality in the community, urban construction, environmental protection, culture and education promotion, and caring for youth.

The exhibition was organized by the national archives center III, Ho Chi Minh Museum and the State Document Management and Archives Department of Vietnam to mark the millennium anniversary of Thang Long-Hanoi.

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