Thursday, November 11, 2010

Culture Vulture

Artist Pham Tuan Tu is one of eight artists recently selected by the Denmark Cultural Development Exchange Fund for its Talent Prize 2010. Born in 1981, Tu is a graduate of the Ha Noi University of Industrial Fine Arts and is a member of the Viet Nam Fine Arts Association's Young Artist Club. Tu spoke to Culture Vulture about his first solo exhibition and about the theme of sexual ambiguity that appears in his work.

Why do you think your work was chosen?

I get feedback from viewers, and I think that they have strange feelings when they look at my paintings. They are curious to see something which rarely appears in painting.

Of the eight painters who won, I like the most the paintings by Nguyen Xuan Hoang. His ideas and forms of expression are very particular. He puts a prosaic object (a chair) in his works but shows its particular aesthetics.

Do you usually paint on the theme of homosexuality?

I paint homosexual subjects because it attracts me. It is one of many themes I want to touch upon. Contradiction between social preconception and instinct makes for a miserable fate, especially for homosexual people.

I think that sex cannot exist as an independent entity. It is a dependent factor and is governed not only by chromosomes but by many other factors like psychology, living environment, habit and nature.

When I began to know about homosexual people, I thought unconsciously about them and their lives. I don't know what urged me try to understand them.

I'm interested in many human interest subjects. In my latest painting, In Life, which will be displayed at the coming National Fine Arts Exhibition, I looked at enjoyment. In another painting, A Memorial Afternoon, which was exhibited by the Young Painters Club last June, I depicted death, or the different ways people die. Not a bodily death, but a mental death.

I have focused on many other subjects in my exhibition.

Do you know how the lesbian and gay community responds to your work?

I have received a lot of feedback from people who have seen the paintings. I think that they should not been seen negatively, but I don't mind. My works are my individual viewpoint. I don't impose my thoughts on theirs.

This is your first solo exhibition. How do you feel about it?

I usually participate in annual exhibitions by the Viet Nam Fine Arts Association, or in groups of independent artists. So this will be the first solo exhibition in my career. It will be a good chance for me to improve myself.

I have had to think a lot about it. I didn't have a specific theme. I want to present the contradictions in modern society. I want to comprehend my individual thoughts with a view to creating new works. I will try to fully express my ideas in various forms.

How long does it take you to complete a painting? Will you sell them?

I paint very quickly. The three paintings Gay, Uni-sex and Mud were made in 2008. The painting In Front of the Mirror, I painted this year. All are acrylic on canvas. Right after finishing them, I was very satisfied with them. But that was at that time.

All the paintings are for sale. — VNS

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Hoang Gia Ngoc selected for Manhunt

Hoang Gia Ngoc flies to Taiwan on Thursday to represent Vietnam - Photo: Courtesy of Elite Vietnam Entertainment Group
Supermodel Hoang Gia Ngoc will represent Vietnam at the world-wide search for best male model, Manhunt International 2010, in Taizhong, Taiwan, November 10-22.

The Department of Performing Arts under the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism approved the 24-year-old, 1.84m tall, Ngoc, who just won the silver prize at the Vietnam Supermodel contest in October.

Elite Vietnam Entertainment Group and Venus Model Agency will prepare costumes, necessary items and training for Ngoc to compete. He will depart for Taiwan on Thursday.

This year the contestant who has the highest vote at the website of the contest http://www.manhunt.com.sg/vote/vote.php will go straight to the final round.

The crowning night of Manhunt International 2010 will take place at Chiang Kai-Shek Memorial Hall of Tung Hai University in Taizhong, Taiwan.

Vietnam has taken part in the contest since 2002 with the participation of supermodel Binh Minh. Ngo Tien Doan who competed at the contest in 2007 brought home the title for the model with best body, while model Nguyen Van Thinh came second in the online vote in 2008.

The Manhunt Contest started off in 1987, when Alex Liu, pageant director of Metromedia Singapore, decided to stage the first male model contest in Singapore.

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Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Hoang Gia Ngoc selected for Manhunt

Hoang Gia Ngoc flies to Taiwan on Thursday to represent Vietnam - Photo: Courtesy of Elite Vietnam Entertainment Group
Supermodel Hoang Gia Ngoc will represent Vietnam at the world-wide search for best male model, Manhunt International 2010, in Taizhong, Taiwan, November 10-22.

The Department of Performing Arts under the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism approved the 24-year-old, 1.84m tall, Ngoc, who just won the silver prize at the Vietnam Supermodel contest in October.

Elite Vietnam Entertainment Group and Venus Model Agency will prepare costumes, necessary items and training for Ngoc to compete. He will depart for Taiwan on Thursday.

This year the contestant who has the highest vote at the website of the contest http://www.manhunt.com.sg/vote/vote.php will go straight to the final round.

The crowning night of Manhunt International 2010 will take place at Chiang Kai-Shek Memorial Hall of Tung Hai University in Taizhong, Taiwan.

Vietnam has taken part in the contest since 2002 with the participation of supermodel Binh Minh. Ngo Tien Doan who competed at the contest in 2007 brought home the title for the model with best body, while model Nguyen Van Thinh came second in the online vote in 2008.

The Manhunt Contest started off in 1987, when Alex Liu, pageant director of Metromedia Singapore, decided to stage the first male model contest in Singapore.

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AusCham flood appeal for Central

AusCham in conjunction with Commonwealth Bank of Australia and Crown Relocations have started a collection appeal to help rebuild the lives of flood victims in the central region.

Commonwealth Bank of Australia has offered to process the transmission of all funds donated, free of charge, to the Red Cross in order to distribute the funds to those in need in the affected areas.

The AusCham appeal also invites people to donate food (rice, instant noodles, canned food and drinking water etc) and non-food (household items, toys, firstaid kits etc) by putting them in collection bins provided at seven specified locations – The Australian International School, ACG International School, British International School, Commonwealth Bank of Australia HCMC branch, ERC Institute Vietnam and The International School.

Crown Relocations distributed all the collection bins on Tuesday. They will also be responsible for shipping all the collected goods to the devastated areas.

For more information about donations contact AusCham at (08) 3911 0212 or visit www.auschamvn.org.

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AusCham flood appeal for Central

AusCham in conjunction with Commonwealth Bank of Australia and Crown Relocations have started a collection appeal to help rebuild the lives of flood victims in the central region.

Commonwealth Bank of Australia has offered to process the transmission of all funds donated, free of charge, to the Red Cross in order to distribute the funds to those in need in the affected areas.

The AusCham appeal also invites people to donate food (rice, instant noodles, canned food and drinking water etc) and non-food (household items, toys, firstaid kits etc) by putting them in collection bins provided at seven specified locations – The Australian International School, ACG International School, British International School, Commonwealth Bank of Australia HCMC branch, ERC Institute Vietnam and The International School.

Crown Relocations distributed all the collection bins on Tuesday. They will also be responsible for shipping all the collected goods to the devastated areas.

For more information about donations contact AusCham at (08) 3911 0212 or visit www.auschamvn.org.

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ACCA launches contest for finance students

The UK-based Association of Chartered Certified Accountants (ACCA) has launched the ACCA Futurist 2010 Contest at the Banking University HCMC in Thu Duc District.

The annual contest targets students from all universities in HCMC, especially those in accounting, auditing and finance such University of Economics HCMC and HCMC Open University, Foreign Trade University, RMIT University, Faculty of Economics - Vietnam National University and Ton Duc Thang  University.

“Skills to solve practical cases of new graduates have so far been very weak. With the ACCA Futurist contest, we hope they will improve those skills, not only in their expertise in economics, management, banking or finance but also in society as well as soft skills” said Le Thi Hong Len, chief representative of ACCA in Vietnam. 

The contest that is in its fourth year will include individual and team demonstrations from November 7 to December 18. To attract more entrants the value of prizes was increased to VND150 million – including VND70 million in cash and VND85 million in scholarships. Two thousand students have entered this years contest so far.

This is also a good time for enterprises to look for talent, Len said.

ACCA is the global body for professional accountants, offering business-relevant, first-choice qualifications. ACCA has 140,000 members and 404,000 students throughout their careers, providing services through a network of 83 offices and active centers in 170 nations.

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Sophie Paris inaugurates fashion center in city

Models show fashion products of Sophie Paris on the opening of this foreign company in HCMC on Tuesday - Photo: Mong Binh
HCMC - Sophie Paris as one of Asia’s leading direct selling fashion companies on Tuesday opened its fashion center in HCMC’s District 3 to showcase the products the company will distribute in Vietnam through multi-level marketing from next month.

Nick Jonsson, general director of Sophie Paris Vietnam, told reporters at the launch function for the company in Vietnam that 650 members had pre-registered to sell fashion products for children, women and children in Vietnam. But, he expected the number would reach 2,000 before the company started to distribute its items in Vietnam on December 1.

Sophie Paris products have been imported into Vietnam in preparation for the market launch, Jonsson told the Daily.

Interested members and customers can view the full catalogue at www.sophieparis.vn or visit the Sophie Paris showroom at 84B Tran Quoc Toan Street from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. Mondays to Fridays. Jonsson said Sophie Paris Vietnam would be running regularly fashion shows at the in-house fashion center for members and fashion lovers.

Bruno Hasson, founder and president of Sophie Paris, described the prices of his company’s fashion products for Vietnam as reasonable, but the quality was guaranteed in terms of materials and designs. These products, including bags, wallets, watches and accessories, are designed by the Indonesia-headquartered company’s French design team.

With trendy products and competitive prices, Jonsson believed Sophie Paris Vietnam targeted 10,000 members and US$2 million of business in the first year of operations. “We enter Vietnam with high hopes and lofty ambitions.”

Hasson pinned high hopes that business of Sophie Paris would fare well in this market of more than 86 million people. “Vietnam offers tremendous opportunities for us as a company.”

Hasson said Sophie Paris had been expanding fast in Indonesia since its inception in 1996, at about 20-30% annually in recent years for the market and the Philippines but stronger in Morocco. He painted a bright future for Sophie Paris Vietnam.

“I’m confident that in Vietnam we will grow very fast and very big,” Hasson said, crediting the company’s entry and expansion were backed by tax reductions and tax breaks as a result of the ASEAN Free Trade Agreement.

Hasson said most of Sophie Paris products were made in Indonesia and the company would consider adding made-in-Vietnam fashion items to its product line-up when the opportunity came.

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