Saturday, October 2, 2010

Vietnam, Japan artisans to show off their skills

To he, Vietnam’s traditional edible rice-flour toy figurine, and the Japanese art of making clay flowers will be on show at an annual cultural event in Hanoi Sunday organized by a student-run NGO.

Pieces of Culture is organized by Hanoikids, which seeks to promote Vietnam to the world. The volunteers group has in the past promoted Korean kim chi, Australian music, British weddings, and football from Italy.

This year two Hanoi artisans, Chu Tien Cong -- the deputy head of the To He club -- and Nguyen Van Nhuong of Xuan Ha village, will make to he figurines resembling animals, flowers, and characters from folk stories.

Akihiko Nakano, an economic adviser in the Japanese embassy, will provide a short introduction to the art of clay flower making.

Both the Vietnamese and Japanese artisans will also instruct visitors and help them make their own to he figurines and clay flowers.

To he is a traditional plaything for children that used to be made and sold only during festivals, especially Tet and the Mid-Autumn Festival.

But nowadays it can be seen at almost all traditional festivals and in public places.

The Japanese art uses clay mixed with water and coloring.

Pieces of Culture will be held at Room 802, Block C, Hanoi University.

Hanoikids was established in 2006.

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Friday, October 1, 2010

Vietnamese film producer to compete in UK contest

Independent film producer Tran Bich Ngoc, who has worked with Oliver Stone and M. Night Shyamalan, will compete in the International Young Creative Entrepreneur contest to be held in the UK this month.

She will go to the UK on a 10-12 day trip and get opportunities to network with the UK film industry and participants from other countries and attend the London Film Festival, according to the British Council in Vietnam.

The contest is scheduled for October 13-23.

Ngoc won the first prize at this year’s International Young Screen Entrepreneur Award organized in July by the British Council to select the Vietnamese contestant to the competition.

She has worked with international crews for “The Vertical Ray of The Sun” by Vietnamese-French director Tran Anh Hung, “The Quiet American” by Australian Phillip Noyce, and “The Last Airbender” by India-born M. Night Shyamalan.

Stone chose Ngoc as the local producer when he was preparing to shoot the film “Pinkville” in 2007. However, the project was postponed due to Writers Guild of America strike in 2007 and 2008.

Ngoc produced films for the Hanoi Audiovisual Company and Vietnam Feature Film Studio from 1998 to 2001 before switching to advertising with which she remains involved.

She remains involved with several international movie productions.

The annual International Young Creative Entrepreneur Award Program is organized as part of the Creative Enterprises project organized by the global British Council since 2004.

There are currently nine awards across different sectors of the creative industries -- music, design, fashion, film, communications, art performance, visual arts, publishing, and architecture.

It will be for the second time that Vietnam will participate in this award after debuting in 2008.

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Thang Long-Hanoi’s millennium celebration opens

A solemn ceremony was held at the Ly Thai To Flower Garden on Friday morning to kick off 10 days of celebrations for the Millennium of Thang Long-Hanoi.

Opening the ceremony, National Assembly Chairman Nguyen Phu Trong, together with Party, State and Hanoi municipal leaders offered incense before the Statue of King Ly Thai To, who had a strategic and sound decision to remove the country’s capital city from Hoa Lu in the northern province of Ninh Binh to Dai La (now Hanoi), opening up a long-term development direction for following generations.

Addressing the event, Secretary of the Hanoi Party Committee Pham Quang Nghi stressed that the historical transfer of the capital from Hoa Lu surrounded by one mountain after another to the centre of the Red River Delta formed an extraordinary step forward for the nation, reaffirming the will to build the national independence and unification and ushering in a new era for the Dai Viet. Thang Long-Hanoi’s thousand-year history has been constantly cultivated by heroic exploits.

“Generations of Vietnamese living in the Ho Chi Minh era, owners of our majestic land and an independent and free country, will surely advance without any misgivings to the future, a future of more beautiful Vietnam so much desired by President Ho Chi Minh,” he said.

At the ceremony, General Director of the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) Irina Bokova presented a certificate recognizing the Thang Long Royal Citadel as a World Cultural Heritage to the Hanoi leaders.

While showing her admiration at Vietnam, one of the few countries in the world that still preserves lively memories of the capital transfer 1,000 years ago, Irina Bokova also recommended that Vietnam should take responsibility for the humankind through promoting the heritage to future generations.

The jubilant atmosphere of the grand celebrations has been seen in each street, each lane and each face of the capital. All roads leading to the Ly Thai To Flower Garden, where the opening ceremony took place, are decorated by flags, banners and flowers. Hanoi is putting on itself a new colorful dress to celebrate its 1,000th birthday.

Jeanne Huynh, an overseas Vietnamese in France, couldn’t hide her feeling when returning to the homeland to attend the great event of the capital and the country. She said she was proud of being a Vietnamese.

Vietnam’s successful hosting of many international events and the recognition of the Thang Long Royal Citadel as a World Culture Heritage have proven the country’s increasingly improved position, she said.

Jeanne Huynh also expressed her belief that in the next 10-15 years, Vietnam can stand on a par with developed countries in the world.

For the UK Ambassador to Vietnam, Mark Kent, the 1,000th anniversary of Thang Long-Hanoi is an event of special significance for him as he is going to end his three-year term of office in Hanoi.

Mark Kent said he was honored to live and work in the 1,000-year-old city of Hanoi. He added that he will join a number of activities during the anniversary, including a race for peace around Hoan Kiem Lake on October 3.

The millennium celebrations of Thang Long-Hanoi will be held within ten days with numerous artistic and cultural activities throughout the capital city.

Highlights of the celebrations will be a meeting and a parade at the Ba Dinh Square as well as a cultural and art gala night at the My Dinh National Stadium on October 10.

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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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Painter Rung celebrates 50 years of artistic discovery

Passion for painting: Lotus Nude, oil on canvas.

Passion for painting: Lotus Nude, oil on canvas.

HCM CITY — The name of Rung is not unknown to art lovers. A graduate of the Hue College of Fine Arts in the sixties, he held his first solo exhibition organised in the former Sai Gon, now HCM City, in 1960.

Since then he has taken part in many others, sometimes solo and sometimes with friends organised in Viet Nam and the US. His works have found their way to many art collections, both at home and abroad.

Patiently following the difficult path of art, the 69-year-old has created more than 2,000 oils, watercolours, acrylics and lacquer paintings and many ceramic works over the decades.

Rung's 17 paintings in the current exhibition at Gallery Tu Do typify the different periods of his life.

"The exhibition is to celebrate my 50 years in painting," said Rung, whose real name is Nguyen Tuan Khanh.

"I continue to paint. My passion for art never fades," he added.

Rung's paintings have attracted the public with their meditative world, their alien ambience and their controversial colours and compositions.

His passions and feelings are seen through an abstract medium.

The boldness of his creations can be seen in several paintings at the exhibition.

He paints men with strong muscles and wild eyes in Nguoi Cua Bien (Men of the Sea) and describes the hard struggle of a group of people trying to free themselves from darkness to enter a bright region in Su Chien Thang Cua Tri Tue (Victory of Wisdom).

Rung praises the beauty of women and nature in several works including Khoa Than Hoa Sen (Lotus Nude) and Me Vuon Xuan (Mother of Spring Garden).

The exhibition continues at Tu Do Gallery, 53 Ho Tung Mau Street, District 1, HCM City, until next Monday. — VNS

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Football final party raises VND40 million for kids to swim

Football supporters back their teams at last Saturday' AFL Grand Final Party in Saigon organized by the Vietnam Swans. A rematch party will be held this Saturday in District 2 - Photo: Courtesy of Vietnam Swans
When the Vietnam Swans held their AFL Grand Final parties last Saturday the only winners were the kids in Hoi An who will benefit from the money raised to teach them how to swim.

The Grand Final match was a shock 68-68 draw between the two inner city Melbourne teams, Collingwood and St Kilda, and everybody left feeling as deflated as a flat football. But the kids in Hoi An cleaned up.

The party at La Cantine in HCMC’s District 1 had 242 footy fans and raised VND30 million for the Tri Bob Swimming Program for kids in Hoi An, while the party for the final in Hanoi with 150 attendees raised VND10 million. The swimming program was started because more kids drown in Central Vietnam than die in road accidents.

Phil Johns the Swans National President said the first thing that came to his mind when the teams drew was, “Oh my God, it was so exhausting organizing this party… How are we going to organize another party for next week’s rematch.”

He said despite it being a great match the draw result was a massive anticlimax for supporters of both teams, who both had good reasons to think their team was going to clinch it in the end. Johns said Collingwood had control of the most of the match but their poor goal kicking was very costly.

Johns and the crew have organized another party this Saturday at 10 a.m. at a different venue in Saigon while the Saigon Swan team members in Hanoi will hold it again at Jaspas, fourth floor Hanoi Towers, 49 Hai Ba Trung..

Everyone is invited to join the Grand Final Redux Party in Saigon at LesudGaudir, 4 Thao Dien Street, District 2.

Johns said the Redux Party will be chilled out with free entry and pay as you go prices. Dress casually in your team colors and bring your bathers if you want to jump into the pool.

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Peace Trees help children blossom

by Minh Thu

Building a future: A group of Americans who donated money to build libraries and kindergartens in the central province of Quang Tri visit a kindergarten in the province. — VNS Photo Minh Thu

Building a future: A group of Americans who donated money to build libraries and kindergartens in the central province of Quang Tri visit a kindergarten in the province. — VNS Photo Minh Thu

QUANG TRI — Doan Thi My Lien, a young teacher, feels a rush of excitement as she prepares her first lessons at a new kindergarten in Khe Da Village in the central province of Quang Tri.

This kindergarten is one of four built by Americans from the non-governmental organisation Peace Trees Viet Nam in the 15 years it has worked in the country to reverse the impacts of war.

The land where cruel battles once launched has become a place for kindergartens, libraries, friendship villages and gardens.

The achievements are the fruits of labour of many people from the US who directly or indirectly suffered from the war in Viet Nam.

The story began when Jerilyn Brusseau lost her young brother, Daniel Cheney, in Viet Nam. Brusseau and her mother decided to turn sorrow into service.

They gathered like-minded people who were against the war and wanted to heal the scars in the country with Peace Trees Viet Nam. They quickly received support from many people, but their journey to the country on the opposite side of the Earth didn't start until 1990 when Viet Nam and the US normalised relations.

A group of American activists led by Brusseau recently visited Peace Trees' newest kindergarten and the Mothers' Peace Library in Khe Da Village.

Children's laughter greeted the group. The youngsters, barefoot and wearing dirty clothes, seemed to be everywhere, including on the new football field, swings and other playground equipment which Peace Trees donors also funded.

Next to the playground stands the new library, a single room with wooden tables, chairs, and a grey shelf already filled with books.

A slightly larger structure is home to the completed kindergarten with its own small kitchen and bathroom, as well as plastic chairs and tables ready to welcome about 30 youngsters.

"Peace Trees projects are really meaningful for the people here," says Ho Thi Loi, the head of the regional Women's Union. "This new school is dedicated to the children of Khe Da Village and neighbouring Ka Tang Village because prior to this, there was no kindergarten here."

Lien, 26, has taught for four years and just returned to work after maternity leave. She is very eager to take over a new class.

"I have spent weeks preparing lesson plans, making toys for the children and decorating the classroom," she says.

Lien lives in the town, 4km away from the school but she is currently staying with some villagers in order to get to know the children and the parents.

"In the past, children under the age of six didn't have a chance to go to kindergarten before entering primary school. Now they will thanks to support from the local authorities and foreign sponsors," she says.

"Because the villagers are very poor, they can't afford to send their children to school, so I'm staying with them and trying to persuade them to do good things for their kids."

David Hansen is one of the US donors visiting the new kindergarten. He plays with the children, gives them toys and smiles with them. He came to Viet Nam for the first time in 1970 to follow orders as a US soldier but now he is in Viet Nam to be a friend to the Vietnamese people.

Tran Thi Hong Van at the Friendship Village Kindergarten in Dong Ha City, began working here the day the kindergarten was inaugurated in 2002.

"Parents here are very poor and they have to work hard, so teachers here have to work harder than other kindergarten teachers," Van says.

"We arrive early to welcome children and leave late when the parents finish their work and pick up their children."

At first the children were shy and afraid of strangers, especially foreigners, but now they get on well with American visitors, Van says.

"The US donors visit the kindergarten several times a year and bring toys and presents for the children whenever they come. Now when they see them, my kids express their joy and friendliness," Van says.

Building libraries and kindergartens on land cleared of bombs is very good work, says Hansen.

"Children are the owners of the future; we should close the past and open the future by giving them the best things we can," he says.

"There is nothing more meaningful than these constructions. We came to destroy the land in the past and now we have come back to contribute to building a bright future for Vietnamese children." — VNS

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