Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Airbus awards student with green thumb

Jean-Michel Caldagues (L), chief representative of EADS in Vietnam with competition winner Bui Ha Thuy Linh - Photo: Courtesy of Airbus
Airbus has picked the winner of a tree planting competition it held at Doan Thi Diem Primary School in Hanoi.

The European aircraft manufacturer launched the contest for the school’s 300 pupils three months ago to support the United Nations International Day for Biodiversity.

Over the weekend, Airbus named grade fiver, Bui Ha Thuy Linh, as the winner for growing the tallest potplant during summer. The winner received a trip for her entire family to Sapa, which is one of Vietnam’s best preserved ecological areas.

“This was really fun,” Linh said in a statement. “The pots were shaped like planes, which was really cool, and we were given a class on how to raise plants and taught about the importance of making our country and our world more green.” Airbus also delivered 10 consolation prizes including notebooks and books about nature.

In late May, Airbus presented each of the students with a special pot and a small seedling to care for during summer. “We are amazed by how these children embraced this program, and it certainly shows us an enthusiasm for environmental concerns among young Vietnamese, and a willingness to get involved in greening up their lives, their city and their country for future generations,” said Sean Lee, communications director of Airbus for Asia.

Dao Thu Thuy, vice headmaster of the school, said the pupils were thrilled to join the Green Wave program to celebrate the International Day of Biodiversity. “This was a fun, fascinating and meaningful activity that has helped our children have a better theoretical and practical awareness of environmental issues, and had them contribute in their own little way to making the earth cleaner and greener in future.”

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A walk through Bui Xuan Phai’s Hanoi

In recognition of painter Bui Xuan Phai (1920-1987), the Goethe Institute Hanoi will hold an exhibition of his paintings on his birthday September 1.

The exhibition that opens September 1 will feature 36 works chosen by the artist’s son, Bui Thanh Phuong. It is the first in a three exhibition series “City in Art” that presents artist’s impressions of Hanoi from foreigners’ and Vietnamese perspectives. The next two shows will start in November.

Bui Xuan Phai, who is seen by many as the most important Vietnamese painter of the 20th century, was born in Hanoi and spent his entire life there. In his small atelier at 87 Thuoc Bac he worked intensively as a freelance artist and left behind an extensive artistic legacy. He was famous especially for his paintings of the Hanoi ancient city, whose streets and characteristic angles he repeatedly used as the subject in his paintings and drawings.

Bui Xuan Phai significantly influenced the development of modern art in Vietnam, although it was not until 1984 that he was recognized with the first and only solo exhibition in his lifetime.

The exhibition will run untill September 3.

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Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Old paintings touch a heart

Tezuka Katsuyoshi and his black cat in the Cat gallery - Photo: Thanh Hang
Tezuka Katsuyoshi was once famous for his Japanese-styled pho (beef noodle soup) on Dong Khoi Street in HCMC. But when his restaurant closed down and he opened an art gallery, the people around Katsuyoshi discovered he had another side.

Tezuka has spent 15 years living in Vietnam collecting Vietnamese works of art by the old painters, like Luong Xuan Nhi, Nguyen Sang or Nguyen Gia Tri. His four storey private gallery called Cat houses thousands of paintings and he attests to a strong affinity with them. “I must look at the paintings before I can go to bed. I must look at the paintings before I can go to sleep. I must look at the paintings before I can get drunk.”

What the gallery on Dong Khoi Street lacks in glitz it makes up for with the calm atmosphere of the East. The old paintings depict the slow pace of life of bygone days in Vietnam. They seem to communicate with us in a language lost to the rush of modern life. Asked why he feels such a deep affection with these old paintings, Tezuka answered that he was simply taken by their beauty. Love doesn’t need an explanation, he said.

Tezuka started his collection with no business aspirations – he kept his whole collection in a private storehouse and never showed it to anyone. He was satisfied to enjoy the paintings all alone, but that changed when he decided to open the gallery to the public in early 2010, as he was starting to feel old. None of the paintings in Cat gallery carries a price tag. Any customer who wants to buy one must agree on a price with Tezuka.

Sitting on a Vietnamese traditional bed, stroking a black cat and listening to the tropical storm outside, the old Japanese man rarely more than half-opened his eyes. Though he didn’t say a lot, he didn’t need to, to express the devotion he has to the paintings of Vietnam’s modern masters.

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French and German films at Idecaf in September

Poster film The Gilr From Monaco
The institute for cultural exchange with France (Idecaf), and the Goethe Institute HCMC will introduce to Vietnamese audiences four French and German films in at Idecaf, 28 Le Thanh Ton Street, HCMC’s District 1 in September.

The film The Third Sex, directed by director Veit Harlan and starring Christian Wolff, Paula Wessely, Paul Dahlke, will be screened at 7:30 p.m. on September 7. The film shows how German young people reacted against homosexuality in the late 1950s. The film follows a young artist Carl who hangs out with a gay guy called Manfred. Carl’s parents try to pull him out the affair that they think will lead  to a fate worse than death.

The film Railway Station Novel directed by Claude Lelouch and starring Dominique Pinon, Fanny Ardant, Audrey Dana will be screened at 3 p.m. on September 11. The film is about a successful writer, who is seeking new characters for her next novel about a criminal trying to escape from prison.

A French romantic film You and Me  will screen at 3 p.m. on September 18. The film is directed by Julie Lopes-Curval and stars Marion Cotillard, Julie Depardieu.

The film tells of the love lives of two sisters Lena and Ariane.

The Girl From Monaco directed by Anne Fontaine is on at 3 p.m. on September 25. Bertrand, a lawyer, Christophe, a bodyguard, and a TV weathergirl get caught in a love triangle.  The film stars Fabrice Luchini, Roschdy Zem and Louise Bourgoin.

Tickets are VND15,000 per person.

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Canon Vietnam launches marathon photo contest

anh
This photo, themed Gia Dinh (Family), by Chu Duc Minh of Hanoi won the grand prize of US$7,000 last year

Canon will organize the annual “Canon PhotoMarathon Vietnam″ photo contest next month, which, as the name suggests, will give competitors three themes in quick succession for completion within a given time frame.

The competition, to be held in Hanoi on September 11 and Ho Chi Minh City the next day, is open to all photographers living in Vietnam.

Each participant will be given three separate themes to base their photos on. They will get three hours to complete each, return to the contest location with their pictures, and download them on to the server before getting the next one.

The work will be judged on criteria like creativity in theme interpretation, use of colors and light/shadow, composition of photograph, and relevance to theme.

There will be one winner and two merit-prize winners in each theme.

The best contestant will get an overall grand prize of US$7,000.

Chu Duc Minh of Hanoi won the grand prize last year.

Further information can be obtained at ha_do@canon.com.sg or tuquan_thai@canon.com.sg.

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Hanoi concerts to mark Chopin’s 200th birthday

chopin
Two concerts to mark Chopin’s 200th birthday will take place at the Hanoi Opera House in September

The Vietnam National Symphony Orchestra will celebrate Chopin’s 200th birth anniversary with two concerts by world-renowned Japanese conductor Tetsuji Honna and talented young Vietnamese pianist Luu Hong Quang on September 7-8.

At the events to be held at the Hanoi Opera House, Quang, 20, will perform “Concerto No.1 E minor” by Frederic Chopin and “Symphony No.6 ‘Pathetique’” by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky.

He has won several international awards. In January 2006 he won a special prize at the Frederick Chopin International Piano Competition in Japan and in June the same year, the third prize at the Val Tidone International Music Competitions in 16–17 age group category.

In 2008 a judge gave him 90 points at the annual Val Tidone International Music Competitions in Piacenza, Italy, fetching Quang a special prize. Another prize designated for contestants scoring 95 or more went unclaimed.

In 2009 he won the Recital Award Piano in Sydney, Australia.

Tetsuji Honna, also a multiple award winner, has been musical adviser and conductor of the VNSO since 2001.

Chopin, the 19th century Polish-born composer, is considered one of the greatest musical geniuses of all time, with his heroic, tragic piano compositions credited with capturing the essence of Poland's soul. His birthday falls on 1 March 1810.

Tickets to the shows cost VND150,000 (US$7.73) to VND300,000.

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Ladies capture their love of Ha Noi

Relic: Gieng Co (Old Well) by Pham Thi Thu.

Relic: Gieng Co (Old Well) by Pham Thi Thu.

Historic: O Quan Chuong Trong Mua (Quan Chuong Gate in Rain) by Kim Lan.

Historic: O Quan Chuong Trong Mua (Quan Chuong Gate in Rain) by Kim Lan.

More than words: Net Xua (Old Feature) by Thi Tho.

More than words: Net Xua (Old Feature) by Thi Tho.

HA NOI — Female photographers from the Hai Au Photography Club based in HCM City have organised an exhibition entitled Ha Noi – Visual Angles featuring 100 black-and-white photos.

The exhibition will remain open at the Temple of Literature in central Ha Noi until September 3 to express the artists' love for the capital and celebrate its 1,000th anniversary.

The Hai Au Club, for female photographers only, sponsored trips to Ha Noi for its members to take photos of the capital.

Fifteen women established the club in 1990. Members range in age and profession but they all have the same passion for capturing beautiful moments through pictures.

During the last 20 years, they have taken hundreds of trips throughout the country and have won 290 awards at home and abroad.

The artists spent hours exploring the capital's streets, Old Quarter, traditional craft villages and ancient pagodas to experience local life and capture some of the beautiful images that epitomise the culture of the capital city.

Their chosen sites included Bat Trang Pottery Village, Ngoc Son Temple, Tran Quoc Pagoda, Thay Pagoda, Tram Pagoda, West Lake, One-Pillar Pagoda and the Temple of Literature.

The artworks reflect the sensitive souls of the artists and their love for Ha Noi, says Vu Quoc Khanh, chairman of the Viet Nam Association for Photographic Artists.

"It's easy to feel the tenderness and precision of the female photographers through their works," he says. "They express the lively life in Ha Noi which is both modern and traditional."

"Ha Noi has been modernised but retains the charms of its Old Quarter, traditional craft villages and ancient pagodas," says photographer Dao Hoa Nu, head of the club.

The members have selected the best shots to be included in a book to celebrate the club's 20th birthday. The book was released as a gift for visitors at the opening ceremony of the exhibition. — VNS

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