Showing posts with label house. Show all posts
Showing posts with label house. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Piano show by Trang Trinh

New Year concert with National Symphony Orchestra

Pianist Trang Trinh - Photo: The pianist
Pianist Trang Trinh, a graduate from the Royal Academy of Music in the U.K., will have a performance called “Diary of Piano” at the Hanoi Opera House, 1 Trang Tien Street at 8 p.m. on February 23.

The show is about the ups and downs in life from innocence to pain and wisdom.

Born in Vinh Phuc Province, the pianist was invited to work for the London-based All Souls Orchestra, and she has had various performance tours in Italy, Austria, Hungary and Ireland.

In 2007, she won the Francis Simmer Prize for playing solo piano, and the Lilian Davis Prize for her performance of Beethoven‘s Sonatas.

One year later, she was awarded the Gretta GM Parkinson Prize for her outstanding academic records.

She will perform the show in HCMC early April.

Tickets are available at the Opera House at VND300,000, VND500,000 and VND1 million.

*Vietnam National Symphony Orchestra concert conducted by Tetsuji Honna featuring piano soloist Isadora Kim will play at  Hanoi Opera House February 18 and 19.

Pieces to be played include Overture from Opera “Russlan and Ludmilla” by M.Glinka and Piano Concerto No.2 by S.Rachmaninov.

The painting “Ascending Dragon” by Do Hong Quan depicting Hanoi, past and present, will be on display during the concert. The event will also include a famous waltz and polka by Johann Strauss II and the waltz, Gold and Silver, by Austrian musician Franz Lehar.

Ethnic percussionists will perform with the orchestra to add a traditional Vietnamese flavor to the European classics.

Tickets are available at the Opera House for VND450, 000, VND350,000, VND250, 000, and VND150,000 and discounted 50% for students.

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Monday, January 31, 2011

Things thou shalt do this Tet

Tet is a great time to be together and wish for good things to come. There are some things many Vietnamese believe should be done during the Tet holiday.

You should hand out gifts to people. They can be a bottle of wine, cakes, jam but it doesn’t matter how big the present is. A flower or just a smile is enough.

You should give children li xi or lucky money put inside red envelopes (red symbolizes luck). This tradition is called li xi or happy new age. You can also give sealed red envelopes to your loved ones or friends.

The cash inside is not important. It could be as low as VND500. But the paper notes should be new, clean and straight.

You should buy or stock water or Tet because water is associated with the proverb “tien vo nhu nuoc” (money gushes in like water).

Many believe sprinkling lime powder around the house could expel evil. Well you could if you can endure the smell.

You should return all things borrowed, and pay debts before the lunar New Year Eve. Otherwise, it is believed that you the borrower would have debts for that whole year.

You should gather together for a family union right before the New Year Eve.

Be on time if you are chosen as the first footer (xong dat). The first person stepping across the houses’ thresholds is thought to the tone for his/her family in the coming year.

The first footer often stays for five or ten minutes outside the house. When the clock signals 12, you then enter the house deliver new year greetings.

You should say “Chuc Mung Nam Moi” or happy new year whenever you meet anyone, even strangers.

You should wear colorful clothes. Avoid black or white clothes (they are for funerals). Red and yellow are favorites.

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Friday, January 28, 2011

Dong Thap's ‘house of love' proves a popular attraction

by Thanh Ha

Warm-hearted home: The Huynh Thuy Le House is one of the most popular locations for foreign tourists when they visit the southern province of Dong Thap.

Warm-hearted home: The Huynh Thuy Le House is one of the most popular locations for foreign tourists when they visit the southern province of Dong Thap.

Style: Vietnamese aspects combine with Western features creating a unique decor which attracts thousands of people per month. — File Photos

Style: Vietnamese aspects combine with Western features creating a unique decor which attracts thousands of people per month. — File Photos

DONG THAP — Do you know what is the most famous house in Viet Nam? Maybe you'd answer "No" because even I only discovered it by accident.

The southern province of Dong Thap is wellknown not only for its populous and fertile land, known as the "rice bowl" of the nation, but is also home to the house made famous by Marguerite Duras in her novel The Lover.

Located in Sa Dec, the oldest town of the Cuu Long (Mekong) Delta, the house first became a tourist site in 2007 and has since welcomed thousands of visitors.

The house was the home of the lover Duras took when she was just 15.

Her story tells of a couple who fell in love at first site on a ferry-boat running along the Tien River from Dong Thap to Sai Gon (now HCM City). They failed to have the support of their families who were from different classes and nationalities.

Huynh Thuy Le was a local inheritor of the province's richest family while French Duras was a daughter of Marie Donnadieu, a poor principle at the L'Ecole Primaire de Jeunes Filles de Sadec (Sa Dec Primary Girl School) the oldest school in the province, now renamed the Trung Vuong Primary School.

They fell deeply in love with each other although they could not tell to anyone, especially Le's family whose father had arranged a marriage between Le and a beauty from Tien Giang Province, whom later became his wife.

They knew about the obstacles but could not stop their love from developing for over a year and a half before his family became aware of the affair.

Le had to marry the arranged bride, while Duras and her relatives returned to France.

Years after the war, Le came to Paris and made a phone call to Duras to say his love for her would continue until his death.

Fifty years after their separation, the call relived the memories of the affair for Duras as though it was yesterday; and from those recollections the novel L'Amant (The Lover) was published in 1984.

The novel became a best-seller, with more than 2.4 million copies printed. In its first year of publication The Lover grabbed the Goncourt prize, a prestigious French award. The semi-autobiographical novel was then translated into 43 languages including Vietnamese and dramatised into a movie of the same name by director Jean-Jacques Annaud in 1992 starring Jane March, Lisa Faulkner and Tony Leung Ka Fai.

Apart from the love story, the house also attracts many people because of its beautiful combination of Eastern and Western architectural styles.

The 250sq.m old house at 225A Nguyen Hue Street, was constructed mainly of wood in 1895 by Huynh Cam Thuan – a wealthy local man. The Vietnamese three-roomed house was then upgraded into a French-styled villa which is what visitors can see today.

The floor was paved with patterned tiles imported from Ardeche, France. The 30-40cm-thick wall is constructed by solid bricks covering the wooden structure.

The roof consists of double tiles with two curved gables making it look like a boat, a typical symbol of the Southern waterways region.

The Western architecture is displayed by the house's front, ceiling, windows and balconies. All of them are decorated with Renaissance-styled reliefs. Meanwhile the Eastern aspects, mainly in Chinese style, are the furniture such as wardrobes, beds and altars which are carved and lacquered skilfully with flowers, animals and trees, displaying the original landlord's wealth.

When Le died in 1972, his family moved to live in France and the house was nearly abandoned. The Dong Thap Tourism Company was assigned to manage the house in 2006 and the house welcomed its first visitors a year later.

"The house is almost identical to how they left it, as Le's daughter on a visit to Viet Nam provided us with decorative details that we could copy," said Huynh Thi Kieu Xuan, a company tour guide.

The interior of the house has photos of the French writer and movie scenes on display.

The house which is also known as the Green House because it was previously painted in green [it is white now] while the rooms were decorated with wood and green glass.

The entrance fee is VND10,000 (US$0.5) per person. The fee includes a guide who can speak English or French, while tea and sugar-coated ginger are served for free. But interested tourists can also book a homestay here at a cost of $30 per room per night which covers a breakfast and lunch or they can enjoy lunch or dinner with Vietnamese and European dishes readily available.

"The house is on the list of must-visit places among foreigners, especially the French, who have read the book or watched the movie," said Tong Duy Minh, director of the Dong Thap Tourism Company.

"Many of them love to stay in the house and act as what the house owner did in the past although the conditions here are not comfortable for them. There isn't any air conditioning, nor fridge or bathroom inside the house," Minh said.

The house which was recognised as a national relic in 2009 has received an average of 1,000 visitors per month, double the figure of 2009.

"They want to be here also because of the house is next to the river and a market. Visitors can make a walk through and witness local residents living and working. We have already received some students who have booked the room for a week to discover life here," Minh said.

Minh said that the house would be much more beautiful in the future as the provincial museum is collecting more of the house's lost objects from Le's relatives. — VNS

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Sunday, January 23, 2011

Ha Noi snake village lures visitors for spring festival

by Cong Thanh

 

Spring blooms: Le Mat villagers perform at the annual festival at the communal house on the lunar New Year. — VNA/VNS Photos Anh Tuan

Spring blooms: Le Mat villagers perform at the annual festival at the communal house on the lunar New Year. — VNA/VNS Photos Anh Tuan

A brush with history: Le Thanh Hai, one of the village's famous calligraphers, displays his skills for tourists. — VNS Photo Hoai Nam

A brush with history: Le Thanh Hai, one of the village's famous calligraphers, displays his skills for tourists. — VNS Photo Hoai Nam

Le Mat Village, 7km northeast of Ha Noi, across the Hong (Red River), has become a destination known for its snake catching and gourmet restaurants.

It plans to host the first Australian tourists groups this June, following a co-operation between Ha Noi-based Focus Travel Company and the Australia Pacific Touring agency.

The snake legend

Many local residents are skilled at catching wild snake and some households in the 7,000-person village have prospered from snake restaurants since the early 1990s.

The elderly residents still talk about a particular snake legend that relates to the village's founding and history.

Nguyen Huy Tuong, 76, a guardian of the village's communal house, said the village was formed in the 11th century under the reign of King Ly Thai Tong.

According to the legend, the king's daughter was boating on what was then the Nguyet Duc River when a giant snake encircled her vessel, creating a whirlpool that tipped the boat. Hoang, a farmer, waded into the churning water, slew the snake, and saved the princess.

The King offered the heroic farmer gold, jewels and a position in the court, but Hoang refused. Instead, he asked for land west of the capital where he founded 13 villages, including Le Mat.

The village still honours Hoang, the village's patron saint, at a festival on the 23rd of the third lunar month.

Residents build a giant bamboo replica of the snake to re-enact Hoang's fateful encounter and the most beautiful girl in the village is chosen to play the princess.

The annual three-day festival draws about 6,000 visitors. During the event, villagers demonstrate net fishing in the lake in front of the communal house to worship the village patron saint and the princess.

Tran Nhu Rat, 70, the deputy head of the relic management board, said.

"The communal house was built in the 11th century, but it was then moved to a new site, which is its current location."

"I heard from old generations that the first house was built on the wrong site in astrological terms, which caused the diseases of villagers," the 70-year-old recalled.

Calligraphy

Snake killer: A man fights against a giant snake in a Le Mat village performance.

Snake killer: A man fights against a giant snake in a Le Mat village performance.

Le Thanh Hai, one of the village's famous calligraphers, has organised a calligraphy performance for tourists at an old house in the village. He encourages visitors to practice their writing, while exploring the old house.

Hai, 42, said he wants to introduce tourists to the art of handwriting that has had such a long history in Viet Nam.

"I demonstrate the reappearance of the prolonged art once seen in rural schools. Confucian scholars used to write letters in an old fashion while wearing an oriental robe and a turban," he explained.

Now, calligraphy is often written in the Han Chinese script or in Vietnamese characters on paper. Visitors often ask calligraphers to make them a letter during Tet as a sign of good fortune for the new year.

"I write many letters for Vietnamese and foreigners, not only during the Tet festival. People believe the letters will bring good luck and happiness to their family and friends."

Hai also explained that he uses different brushes to write thin and thick letters. He said most people ask for letters meaning peace, happiness or prosperity.

"Brushes made from chicken feathers or horse hair are used to write bold words, while brushes made from cat or rabbit hair is used for thin letters."

Tourists enjoy the art by writing words and then bringing home their creations after visiting the house.

Truong Van Mai, 60, the owner of a house that was home to five generations, said his house still remains the best old architecture in the north.

"The house's structure is made mostly from ironwood, which keeps the house cool in summer and warm in winter," Mai said, adding that the house was restored last year.

"I leave jars of rain water and plant areca and betel in a small garden. Northerners always offer visitors tea and betel chewing – a popular custom in Viet Nam."

He said the village has several old houses that have survived the rapid urbanisation in recent years. The construction of new houses has gradually taken the place of the village's thatched roof cottages. Visitors now only recognise the rural village by pictures of banyan trees and the lake in front of the communal house. — VNS

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Friday, January 14, 2011

HCMC to host festivities for Tet

The Ho Chi Minh City Youth Cultural House will organize lots of festivities to celebrate the Lunar New Year, which falls on February 3.

“Radiant Springs” photos exhibition, “Scholar Town” calligraphy demonstration, and souvenir booths will be scheduled at the Cultural House from January 22 to February 7.

Also to be organized are the Model Star fashion contest on January 23 and “Green Smile” comedy theatre festival on January 24-25.

The Cultural House will also organize other music bashes namely “Youth Dance” on January 27, “Shining” on January 28, “Spring of Love” on January 30, and “Dreaming Spring” on February 6.

The highlight is the “Warm Spring – Blessing” music show on January 29 to raise funds for poor children.

In addition, a Tet cake fest is planned at the House on February 1 to serve local and international tourists during Tet.

Besides, festival-goers will have a chance to witness a human chess performance on February 5 and traditional martial arts fest one day later.

The House will display Tet-themed magazines and newspapers to serve visitors from January 29 to February 9.

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Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Book show welcomes Party Congress

HCMCITY— A special book exhibition has opened at HCM City's Nguyen Hue Bookstore to welcome the 11th National Congress of the Communist Party of Viet Nam that officially begins in Ha Noi today.

The exhibition, featuring more than 1,500 titles in different fields, attracted many readers, young and old, to its opening ceremony yesterday.

The display has three major themes: The Party's Documents; The Life and Work of President Ho Chi Minh; and Historical Events during the American War in Viet Nam.

Around 10,000 books cover events and heroes of different periods over the 81 years since the Party's inception, according to the HCM City Books Distribution Company (Fahasa), a member of the event's organising board.

Participating in the exhibition are leading printers like the HCM City General Publishing House, National Politics Publishing House, Tre (Youth) Publishing House and Thanh Nien (Young People) Publishing House.

The Culture-Theatre Publishing House's Hanh Khuc Giai Phong (Liberation March) is one of the exhibition's highlighted books.

The book is a research work compiled and edited by Lu Nhat Vu, Le Giang and Le Anh Trung, three of the city's veteran composers and art critics.

Hanh Khuc Giai Phong displays nearly 600 songs and 54 works by musicians and authors during the 1954-75 period. They creatively capture the people's thirst for national independence as well as their love for President Ho Chi Minh and soldiers.

The Tre Publishing House introduces one of its bestsellers of last year, Tran Thai Binh's Vo Nguyen Giap -Hao Khi Tram Nam (General Vo Nguyen Giap - Magnanimity for a Hundred Years).

The book portrays the life and military career of Vo Nguyen Giap, focusing on the General's outstanding contributions to the victories against French and American aggressors.

Organisers said they hope the exhibition would help people, particularly young readers, learn more about the country's heroic history, the Party and its causes and victories.

Nearly 1,000 books will be presented to soldiers working for the Border Guard Command, they said.

The exhibition will remain open at 40 Nguyen Hue Street, District 1, from 9am to 10pm until January 16. Entrance is free. — VNS

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Ancient martial arts school under renovation

THUA THIEN-HUE — A VND1-billion (US$50,000) renovation project on the Xien Vo Temple in the ancient capital of Hue has been launched by the Hue Monuments Conservation Centre.

The project, which deals with the temple's main compartment and two wings, is expected to be completed by October.

The building, also called Vo Ban Temple, was used as a martial arts teaching facility for children of high-ranking mandarins under King Minh Mang (1820-40).

Recognised as a provincial historical and architectural vestige in 2006, the temple presents features of a ruong house – a typical wooden house that once dominated the city.

One-day photo contest to be held in capital

HA NOI — Photography enthusiasts over 18-years of age are invited to join a one-day photo contest in Ha Noi on Sunday.

Organised by the site www.xomnhiepanh.com – a website for people interested in photography – the contest will focus on the unique features of the city, such as sidewalk tea shops, street food stalls, local open-air markets and cyclos.

Contestants will have from 7am till 4pm to capture images before submitting their five best photographs to the judges.

The top three photos will be auctioned for charity. The first-prize winner will receive a digital camera.

Renovation of old community house complete

THANH HOA — A VND3 billion (US$150,000) renovation project on the Dong Mon Communal House in the central northern province of Thanh Hoa has been completed.

Built under the reign of King Le Trung Hung (1570-1623) in Vinh Long District, the temple is the province's oldest communal house and still has nearly all of its original features.

It is a five-compartment complex with sophisticated carving patterns on its pillars, demonstrating the typical architectural style of Vietnamese communal houses.

Charity gala event to help aid children in need

HA NOI — Leading artists will gather to perform at a charity gala on Thursday to raise money for children living at Ha Noi's Phuc Lam Preschool and Nursery.

The show, which is to take place at the capital's historic Sofitel Legend Metropole Hanoi hotel, is entitled Cay Lieu Khoc Cho Em (Willow Weeps for Me).

As a curtain raiser, Spanish fashion designer Chula will present her latest collection, which features the diamond jewellery of the Ha Noi-based London Diamond Gallery.

Vietnamese diva My Linh and virtuoso pianist Pho An My will share the stage with the hotel's resident French jazz diva Trebeka on the night. Award-winning actress Le Khanh will MC.

The event is organised by the the non-profit charity organisation, Willow Weeps for Me, founded by Trebeka.

High schools win top prizes for ‘Sweet Dream' performance

HA NOI — Phan Dinh Phung and Kim Lien High Schools won the first prizes in the final round of the Ha Noi High School English Festival 2010 on Sunday for their outstanding performance titled Sweet Dream.

Organised by the Ha Noi Department of Education and Training and Apollo English, the festival awarded three second prizes to Viet Duc High School for their performance of the English song Stand up for Love, Hoai Duc A High School for their eloquence, and Nguyen Sieu High School for their hip-hop play titled Apologise.

Prizes were also given to other schools joining the festival held at the Youth Theatre in Ngo Thi Nham Street. — VNS

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Friday, January 7, 2011

Restored Mong King's house becomes major tourism site

by Thuy Hang

Kingly features: A Mong ethnic woman stands at Vuong mansion's main entrance. — VNS Photos Truong Vi

Kingly features: A Mong ethnic woman stands at Vuong mansion's main entrance. — VNS Photos Truong Vi

Forest lair: Stone steps between old pines lead to the mansion.

Forest lair: Stone steps between old pines lead to the mansion.

Hanoian couple Bich Thuy and Thanh Trung chose the Vuong Mansion – an old two-storey wooden house in the Dong Van karst plateau in the northern mountainous province of Ha Giang, as the background for their wedding photos.

The house is the place where bride-to-be Thuy received her proposal of marriage a year ago. "The beautiful wooden mansion somehow is a part of our love story, so we wanted it (the house) present in our photos," she said.

Located in Sa Phin Valley, the house originally was the mansion of Vuong Chinh Duc, the head of the Vuong family – the most powerful Mong ethnic family in the region more than 100 years ago. He proclaimed himself as the King of the region, and adopted the title "Vua Meo", meaning "King of the Meo" (former name of the Mong ethnic group) to dominate all the northern mountainous region.

During the Nguyen dynasty, King Khai Dinh in 1913 issued a royal proclaimation appointing Duc as the sole rule of the frontier region; and today visitors can see the royal proclaimation hanging in the main room of the mansion.

Inheriting power from his father, Duc's son, Vuong Chi Sinh, also commanded the region in the early decades of the 20th century before becoming a deputy to the first and second National Assembly of the Democratic Republic of Viet Nam (the forerunner to the Socialist Republic of Viet Nam). He was renamed Vuong Chi Thanh by President Ho Chi Minh

Sinh donated most of his treasure to the Vietnamese resistance government led by President Ho in the war against the French occupation (1946-54).

To enter the 64-room mansion, visitors have to climb up a series of stone steps sandwiched in between old pine trees leading to the mansion's entrance of a small wooden gate set into a round stone wall.

According to Vuong family history, to build the house, Duc invited a Chinese fengshui master to choose an auspicious location for the building. The tortoise-shaped Sa Phin Valley, was believed to act as symbol of longevity and prosperity, a good omen when combined with the protective belt of eight surrounding mountains.

The mansion's structure is based on the shape of the Chinese character "wang", which also means "wealthy", with four horizontal and six vertical house blocks.

Iron wood, green stone and yin-and-yang double tiles are the main materials used in the construction of the mansion, which combines the typical architectural style of the Chinese Qing dynasty with Mong ethnic features. Wealth is also represented through the sophisticated dragon, phoenix and bat patterns carved on the mansion's pillars. The Chinese Han character "shou" meaning longevity also can be seen in every roof tile.

It took eight years to complete the two-storey mansion. Covering 1,200sq.m, the complex includes the main area with living room, working room, bedrooms, and additional rooms for servants and guards, food and weapon storage, a kitchen and cattle stable.

Located in a water-deprived region, the mansion also includes a huge stone tank to retain rain water, which nowadays has become the main water supplier for the valley's residents.

Staying alive: The Chinese Han character shou, meaning longevity, can be seen at the end of every roof tile.

Staying alive: The Chinese Han character shou, meaning longevity, can be seen at the end of every roof tile.

A green area outside the protective wall is the glorious family's graveyard, where visitors can offer incense at the tombs of Sinh and his father. Visitors can see the words "tan trung bao quoc, bat thu no le" (A life devoted to the nation, never accepting of being a slave) – the epitaph given by President Ho.

Although recognised as a national architectural and artistic relic in 1993, the mansion was beginning to suffer from a lack of repair and the loss of various valuable household items.

In 2004, a VND7.5-billion (about US$500,000 at that time) project conducted by the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism restored the original beauty of the mansion. The house then become one of the most highlight tourism spots in Ha Giang.

"As an architectural masterpiece of the Mong ethnic people living in the Dong Van karst plateau, the mansion is among one of the must-visit spots whenever tourists visit the region. Local cultural researchers have kept collecting items related to the history of the Vuong family, aiming to turn the mansion into a small museum," said Nguyen Trung Thuong, director of the Ha Giang Culture, Sports and Tourism Department.

Today the mansion not only greets an increasing number of tourists, but also welcomes many professional photographers, who are attracted by its unique features and beautiful location. — VNS

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Thursday, November 11, 2010

Restored 17th century dinh opens

Prize winner: Restoration of the wooden-pillar Chu Quyen (Chang) Communal House won top prize at the International Union of Architects in Xi'an, China, last month. — File Photo

Prize winner: Restoration of the wooden-pillar Chu Quyen (Chang) Communal House won top prize at the International Union of Architects in Xi'an, China, last month. — File Photo

HA NOI — A 17th century communal house (dinh) on the outskirts of Ha Noi that won the highest prize in the heritage preservation category at the International Union of Architects in Xi'an, China, last month, has officially reopened after months of restoration.

"The model restoration project aimed to duplicate as best as possible the original design," said Tran Lam Ben from the Cultural Heritage Department. "However, there has been some improper restoration work, which we will ask the workers to fix later."

According to architect Le Thanh Vinh, who headed the restoration team, the work was extremely intricate.

"We first had to conduct very careful research on all the relics to gauge what sort of condition they were in," he said.

Ultra-sound equipment was used to check the condition of the house's wooden pillars, he said.

Chu Quyen Communal House's 48 wooden pillars were damaged by weathering. However, only two had to be replaced, Vinh said.

The original house roof was made up of 51 different kinds of tiles. Restorers said 48,000 of the original tiles were saved. Those that needed to be replaced were produced using traditional methods of baking clay over straw.

Because of efforts to duplicate the original design, the work took twice as long as normal, Vinh said.

The restoration beat 33 entries from 14 countries in the Asia Pacific region to win the architects' award – the first Viet Nam has won.

The communal house, more commonly referred to as the Chang Communal House, is in Ha Noi's Ba Vi District. It consists of a room, largely constructed of wood, for worship.

The house was recognised as a historical site in 1962. Restoration on the house began in 2007.

Tran Chien Thang, deputy minister of culture, said the project would serve as the standard for other restoration work. — VNS

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Thursday, October 14, 2010

Vietnamese poet wins Romanian Academy prize

HA NOI — Acclaimed Vietnamese poet Nguyen Duy has been awarded this year's Grand Prize for Poetry by the Romanian Academy.

Founded by famous Romanian writers and poets, including two Nobel-prize holders, the prize is awarded to a foreign poet every year.

Duy was unable to be present at the awards ceremony in Bucharest, Romania last Friday due to health problems.

The 62-year-old poet, whose real name is Nguyen Duy Nhue, has published several works, including six volumes of poetry, a number of personal narratives and one novel. Many of his works have been translated into English.

He has given several lectures at universities in the US and has won several national poetry awards.

He recently finished a poetry collection that was published by the Nha Nam Publishing House.

City Opera House hosts rhythm and blues concert

HCM CITY — A rhythm and blues trio led by Roland Tchakounte will present a concert at HCM City's Opera House this evening.

Born in Cameroon, Tchakounte learnt percussion, guitar, piano and harmonica and creating a synthesis between his African roots, blues influences and his native dialect.

He has released four albums, the latest being Blues Menessen.

The trio with Tchakounte as the main vocalist, Mick Ravassat guitarist and Mathias Bernheim percussionist, has performed in many countries.

They were last in Ha Noi in 2008, organised by the French Embassy in Viet Nam. This tour is organised by the Institute for Culture Exchange with France. Tickets for the 8pm performance range from VND50,000 (for students) to VND100,000; they are available at the Opera House, 7 Lam Son Square, District 1.

Painting contest for Asian teenagers kicks off

HA NOI — The Mitsubishi-Enikki Arts Festival for Asian Teenagers was launched yesterday in Ha Noi.

The contest was jointly held by the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism's Department of Arts, Photography and Exhibition and UNESCO's Unions in Japan.

Teenagers aged from six to12 nationwide can join the contest which aims to encourage their understanding of daily life.

Under the main theme, Here Is Your Life, contestants can describe any aspects of daily life, such as their family, school, their entertainment, local traditional customs, city and people.

Entries should be sent to the Department of Arts, Photography and Exhibition, 36 Cao Ba Quat, Ha Noi, by November 15-18.

A grand prize will be provided by the Japanese organising board.

Four special prizes will be given to each country or each region and many other prizes will be given to groups and individuals by Viet Nam. — VNS

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Friday, October 1, 2010

Old house in Hoi An maintains link with Oriental philosophies

by Ngoc Duy

 
 
Tan Ky Old House has been a popular destination for foreign tourists visiting Hoi An.

Tan Ky Old House has been a popular destination for foreign tourists visiting Hoi An.

 
Two foreign tourists (right) listen to a guide in the house. — VNS Photos Ngoc Duy

Two foreign tourists (right) listen to a guide in the house. — VNS Photos Ngoc Duy

As you look at the thousands of name cards and keepsakes that visitors have left in Tan Ky House in the ancient city of Hoi An, you won't have to ask how much interest there is in a house that has been recognised by the Government as a historical and cultural monument since the 1980s.

Others may have their own reasons for loving the house, but for me, as I let the lady of the house guide me around, I feel like spending hours here just to contemplate truly old Oriental architecture, learn about the history that is integrated with every detail of the house, and meditate on life's ancient philosophies.

The house, located at 101 Nguyen Thai Hoc Street, was built more than two centuries ago. The same family has lived in the home for seven generations. The name Tan Ky, meaning "Progress Shop", was given to the house by the second generation to express the owner's wish for a prosperous business.

"Tan Ky still offers evidence of an era when trade with foreigners flourished in this major commercial port city from the 18th until the first half of the 19th century, a time when wealthy merchants built imposing houses like this," said Huynh Thi Tan Xuan, the house's mistress.

At that time, the Tan Ky family traded in agricultural products. Their customers included local and foreign merchants from Southeast Asia and Europe.

Boats sailed up the Thu Bon River to reach the house. Goods ready for sale were kept on the ground floor, while products to be sold later were moved to the upper storage floors by a pulley system.

The storage area is just one of the many details of the house that has remained unchanged to this day. However, by the beginning of last century, Hoi An was no longer among the most important business centres of the region as a result of continuous floods that silted up the river and prevented big ships from entering the port.

"Generation after generation, the Tan Ky family has made untiring attempts to keep the house in good condition, despite time and the devastation of floods," said Xuan.

She said the architecture is the most special thing about the house because it features elements of Vietnamese, Chinese and Japanese cultures from a time when the three communities lived together in Hoi An during the 16th and 17th centuries.

The outside structure of the house is made of bricks and tiles, while the inside is made of jack-fruit trees, ironwood and peck-wood, which are very hard and durable. The floor is covered with stone slates and Bat Trang bricks, which came from northern areas of Viet Nam.

The house is joined together with wooden pegs and rests on marble bases. Thanks to thick roofs and wooden walls, the house is cool in summer and warm in winter.

The triple-beam structure consists of three beams, which represent heaven, earth and humans, and five round blocks, which represent metal, wood, water, fire and earth – the five basic natural elements in Eastern philosophy. The entire structure is a symbol of heaven and earth in harmony.

The ceiling curves like a crab shell, hence it is called a crab-shelled ceiling. The roof is supported by two sabres wrapped in silk ribbons, which represent force and flexibility.

The edge of the roof is decorated with four half-dragon fish, a symbol of people who succeed through hard work.

"All of the carvings here are expressions of our ancestors' wishes for something," said Xuan.

"Peaches symbolise the hope for longevity, bats for happiness (in the Han Chinese language the words for bats and happiness have the same sound), rolls of poetry for knowledge, wine gourds for pleasure, and pumpkins with many seeds for plentiful descendants."

"The furniture and art in the house, much of which are original, are also typical of a bygone era," she said.

One of the famous pieces is a pair of wood panels, which are inscribed with parallel sentences. Each stroke of writing is an image of a bird. One hundred birds in total represent honourable men and perfection, she said. "Another unique piece has an interesting story behind it," Xuan said, pointing at what she called the "Cup of Confucius".

A legend says that when ancient Chinese philosopher Confucius nearly died of hunger and thirst on a journey through the desert, he met an old man who led him to a pond and gave him a cup to scoop water.

He scooped up a full cup but when he brought it to his mouth, there was no water. Surprised, he found that the cup had a small hole at the bottom which water fell through when the cup was full. He finally understood that he could not drink the water unless he only partially filled the cup.

Confucius then theorised that human beings needed to control their behaviours and keep their minds level, not in extremes, and live as gentleman with human love, faith, righteousness, wisdom and loyalty. Later on, the legendary cup that saved Confucius was named the Cup of Confucius and his followers produced similar cups in order to practise and propagate his doctrine.

The Cup of Confucius in Tan Ky house maintains its original strangeness because if someone attempts to fill it more than 80 per cent, all the water falls out, said Xuan.

Xuan said Tan Ky, recognised as one of the best preserved and most beautiful old houses in Hoi An today, has the honour of receiving thousands of visitors every year. Many national and international leaders who have visited the house have left their autographs behind.

"Preserving all of these values has become an age-old tradition in our family," she said. "My husband lives and works in Da Nang, but I stay here to look after this property and conserve our traditions." — VNS

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Monday, September 20, 2010

Hanoi ancient house popular to tourists

A Hanoi ancient house with a garden has stood for nearly 100 years and is becoming a popular destination with visitors when they visit the 1,000 year-old-city.

The house, located at 115 Hang Bac (Silver) Street in Hoan Kiem district has been home to five generations of the Pham family.

According to the owner, 96-year-old Pham Thi Te, her family moved from Chau Khe village in northern Hai Duong province to settle in Hanoi in 1890, to make jewelry.

In 1920, her family bought over 500 square meters of land and built a two-storey house with 16 rooms, which has two gates, one in Hang Bac street and another in Dinh Liet street.

The house was built in a French architectural style with wooden staircases, high pillars and many windows. The roof is tiled and curves out at the ends, making the house look very elegant.

Vietnamese culture is reflected by four dragon heads attached to the four roof ends. The balcony is decorated with intricate designs. In the spacious front yard there are pots of ornamental plants, stone miniatures and a big fish tank.

The house has a large garden with traditional ornamental plants such as the Barringtonia angusta Kurj, little bamboo trees and rows of green arecas a dozen meters high and as old as the house.

Through the ups and downs of history, for nearly a century, the house has retained its style with wooden tables and chairs and paintings inside.

The house, particularly the garden, has attracted a lot of attention from domestic and foreign experts and is listed in the book “The 36 guild streets area in Hanoi’s Old Quarter” by Japanese experts.

Visitors see the house to contemplate its ancient architecture amid the bustling streets.

The Hanoi People’s Committee has approved a project to preserve the house, which is the only garden house remaining in the Old Quarter.

Pham Tuan Long, deputy chief of Hanoi’s Ancient Houses Management Board, said that the house will be preserved and developed as a tourist destination and is expected to give visitors a glimpse of Vietnam’s old architecture and culture.

It will also give tourists a still and peaceful environment so they can escape from the bustle of urban life.

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