Wednesday, December 29, 2010

‘Sharp' exhibition hits the right notes

Taking a breather: Nghi ngoi (Resting), an oil painting by Luong Luu Bien, is one of 26 works by seven artists on display at the Dau Thang exhibition at HCM City Fine Arts University's Applied Arts Centre.

Taking a breather: Nghi ngoi (Resting), an oil painting by Luong Luu Bien, is one of 26 works by seven artists on display at the Dau Thang exhibition at HCM City Fine Arts University's Applied Arts Centre.

HCM CITY — Seven HCM City artists born in the 1970s display their artistic evolution in a group show of paintings and installation works at the Dau Thang (Sharp) exhibition at the HCM City Fine Arts University Applied Arts Centre.

The name of the show, which contains 26 paintings and a sculpture, refers to a music notation that indicates a note is higher in pitch by a semitone (half step).

"It is an example of a difference in creation, meaning differences to yourself, and differences between you and others," say artists.

Artist Bui Tien Tuan said he was affected by the beauty of women, which offered him "unlimited sources of inspiration".

The 39-year-old artist's five paintings depict women in poses of innocence, sexiness and assertion.

His paintings contain traditional Vietnamese material, including silk, which is often used to express the beauty of landscapes and inner feelings.

But Tuan uses the material to highlight his ideas about the arts and women.

Tuan, a graduate of the HCM City Fine Arts University, won the silver prize at the National Fine Arts Exhibition in Ha Noi last month.

He has had several solo and group exhibitions in Ha Noi, HCM City and Seoul.

Another artist, Luong Luu Bien, has five oil paintings that depict the inner life of people.

The exhibition also highlights acrylic and oil paintings by Nguyen Son, Vo Duy Don and Phuong Quoc Tri.

Their colleague, Mac Hoang Thuong, displays seven portrait sketches, while La Huy uses wax and newspaper to create his installation work.

All seven artists have held successful exhibitions in Viet Nam this year.

The exhibition at the university's Applied Arts Centre is at No 5 Phan Dang Luu Street and runs until December 31. — VNS

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Hip-hop steps up in monthly contest

Upside down: Big Toe dance crew performs. — VNS File Photo

Upside down: Big Toe dance crew performs. — VNS File Photo

HA NOI — A hip-hop contest will be organised every month for dancers throughout the country in preparation for a final round at the end of next year, according to Nguyen Viet Thanh, head of the Southeast Asia hip hop champion crew 2010, Big Toe.

Thanh said that the move was aimed at creating opportunities for hip hop lovers throughout the country to practise, compete and enhance their dancing skills and develop the Vietnamese hip hop movement.

The first monthly contest was held on Sunday in Ha Noi, drawing 66 dancers from across the country who competed directly in a knock-out format. The judges included members of Ha Noi-based Big Toe namely Nguyen Anh Duc, Bui Manh Thang and Nguyen Manh Nam.

Thanh hoped to invite foreign dancers to join the judges for the final round.

"We want to develop hip hop as a healthy way for Vietnamese youths to express their characters," he said. "The final winners will compete as Viet Nam's representatives at an international competition."

Big Toe won the Battle of the Year (BOTY) Southeast Asia in Singapore in October this year to earn the 10-member dance team tickets to France to compete at the BOTY International Final 2010 in November.

Founded in 1992 when hip hop first arrived in Viet Nam with just seven members, the crew has grown to 60, and won national and international acclaim.

BOTY is an international competition for break-dancers. Each region or country will have one representative at the BOTY International Final in France. — VNS

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Yxine short-film winners announced

Director Do Dang Thuong (L) receives a cash prize from the Yxine Film Fest for his film “The Journey Unknown” - Photo: Courtesy of the organizer
A five-minute film by a young Vietnamese American, Vu Quang Huy, won four prizes including best director and best actor at the Yxine Film Fest, an online short-film competition, on Sunday in HCMC.

The winners of the contest that opened in May were announced at the website www.yxine.com.

Huy’s film, “Thinking of You”, was also granted the Golden Heart Award and Best Cinematographer by the five member jury: director Viet Linh, director Nguyen Quang Dung, journalist Le Hong Lam, critic Nguyen Thanh Son and novelist Ho Anh Thai.

“The Journey Unknown” by Do Dang Thuong won best screenplay and best editor. “L.O.V.E” by Vu Ngoc Phuong won the Red Heart Award voted by the audience. “Up in the Tree” by Bui Quoc Thang received New Heart Award for emerging directors.

“Thinking of You” had previously won a Hidden Genius award, a short film competition open to emerging filmmakers by the Vietnamese American Arts and Letters Association held at the University of California, Los Angeles in April.

During the duration of the Yxine competition, there were twenty movies screened on the website.

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Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Vietnamese Student wins online short film festival

“Thinking of You” by Vietnamese-American Vu Quang Huy has won the Golden Heart prize for best film at YxineFF, Vietnam's first online short film festival.

The chemical biology student from the University of California (UC) also received prizes for best director and best cinematography at a ceremony held at Ho Chi Minh City's BHD Cinema Star Sunday.

American student of the UC, Christy Yang won the prize for best actor.

Huy's film, produced in 2009, is a vignette about a quirky flower-shop girl and the elusive "object" of her desire.

He is polishing the script for a movie version of the film he hopes to make in the next two years.

The five-minute version also won the Audience Award at Hidden Genius, a short film competition sponsored by the Vietnamese-American Arts and Letters Association.

It has been screened at various festivals like the Vietnamese International Film Festival and San Diego Film Festival.

At the YxineFF, animated film The Journey Unknown by Do Dang Thuong of HCMC grabbed the best script and best film editing prizes.

The 4-minute-40-second film depicts the journey of an unnamed, faceless character that jumps out of a book's page through the book that takes it through heaven, destruction, urbanization, and war.

Thuong said he actually created the character and background from paper before resorting to stop motion, an animation technique.

The film is the 23-year-old's first production and was screened at the Future Shorts Festival, which is organized by the global short film community, held in Vietnam last year.

The organisers of YxineFF, the Sai Gon Media Company and local film aficionados, gave away the Red Heart prize for best film chosen by audiences to L.O.V.E by Vu Ngoc Phuong, an overseas Vietnamese from the Philippines.

Up in the Tree, directed by Bui Quoc Thang of Hanoi, won the New Heart prize for the film with creative and new ideas.

All the award-wining films can be watched at the festival's website at www.yxineff.com.

The festival, which was launched in May, aims to broaden the independent film-making community in Vietnam and offer local film-makers an opportunity to promote their works worldwide.

It showed 20 films in the Competition category for 10-minute films, 21 films in the Panorama category for 30-minute shorts made in the last three years, and 12 films made by young directors in the In Focus category.

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Monthly hip hop contest to be held

HA NOI -- A hip hop contest would be organised every month for dancers throughout the country in preparation for a final round at the end of next year, according to Nguyen Viet Thanh, head of the Southeast Asia hip hop champion crew 2010, Big Toe.

Thanh said that the move was aimed at creating opportunities for hip hop lovers throughout the country to practise, compete and enhance their dancing skills and develop the Vietnamese hip hop movement.

The first monthly contest was held on Sunday in Ha Noi, drawing 66 dancers from across the country who competed directly in a knock-out format. The judges included members of Ha Noi-based Big Toe including Nguyen Anh Duc, Bui Manh Thang and Nguyen Manh Nam.

Thanh hoped to invite foreign dancers to join the judges for the final round.

"We want to develop hip hop as a healthy way for Vietnamese youths to express their characters," he said, "The final winners will compete as Viet Nam's representatives at an international competition."

Big Toe, won the Battle of the Year (BOTY) Southeast Asia in Singapore in October this year to earn the 10 member dance team tickets to France to compete at the BOTY International Final 2010 in November.

Founded in 1992 when hip hop first arrived in Viet Nam with just seven members, the crew has grown to 60, and has won national and international acclaim.

BOTY is an international competition for break-dancers. Each region or country will have one representative at the BOTY International Final in France. - VNS

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Student wins online short film festival

Best cuts: Scenes from The Journey Unknown by Do Dang Thuong of HCM City grabbed the best script and best film editing prizes. — File Photo

Best cuts: Scenes from The Journey Unknown by Do Dang Thuong of HCM City grabbed the best script and best film editing prizes. — File Photo

HCM CITY — Thinking of You by Vietnamese-American Vu Quang Huy has won the Golden Heart prize for best film at YxineFF, Viet Nam's first online short film festival.

The chemical biology student from the University of California (UC) also received prizes for best director and best cinematography at a ceremony held at HCM City's BHD Cinema Star on Sunday.

American student of the UC, Christy Yang won the prize for best actor.

Huy's film, produced in 2009, is a vignette about a quirky flower-shop girl and the elusive "object" of her desire.

He is polishing the script for a movie version of the film he hopes to make in the next two years.

The five-minute version also won the Audience Award at Hidden Genius, a short film competition sponsored by the Vietnamese-American Arts and Letters Association.

It has been screened at various festivals like the Vietnamese International Film Festival and San Diego Film Festival.

At the YxineFF, animated film The Journey Unknown by Do Dang Thuong of HCM City grabbed the best script and best film editing prizes.

The 4-minute-40-second film depicts the journey of an unnamed, faceless character that jumps out of a book's page through the book that takes it through heaven, destruction, urbanisation, and war.

Thuong said he actually created the character and background from paper before resorting to stop motion, an animation technique.

The film is the 23-year-old's first production and was screened at the Future Shorts Festival, which is organised by the global short film community, held in Viet Nam last year.

The organisers of YxineFF, the Sai Gon Media Company and local film aficionados, gave away the Red Heart prize for best film chosen by audiences to L.O.V.E by Vu Ngoc Phuong, an overseas Vietnamese from the Philippines.

Up in the Tree, directed by Bui Quoc Thang of Ha Noi, won the New Heart prize for the film with creative and new ideas.

All the award-wining films can be watched at the festival's website at www.yxineff.com.

The festival, which was launched in May, aims to broaden the independent film-making community in Viet Nam and offer local film-makers an opportunity to promote their works worldwide.

It showed 20 films in the Competition category for 10-minute films, 21 films in the Panorama category for 30-minute shorts made in the last three years, and 12 films made by young directors in the In Focus category. — VNS

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Singer returns with Latin twist

by Van Dat

Hot chocolate: Singer Doan Trang holds an irreplaceable position in audiences' hearts. — File Photo

Hot chocolate: Singer Doan Trang holds an irreplaceable position in audiences' hearts. — File Photo

HCM CITY — When she was a child, Cao Thi Doan Trang practiced diligently and won her audiences' hearts with her sweet voice.

Today, although she is not as popular as other top singers, she holds an irreplaceable position in audiences' hearts. It's all thanks to her creativity and hard work.

From her early years in singing, during her 20s, Vietnamese pop and Latin-influenced singer Doan Trang won listeners' acclaim with the song Khi Toi 20 (My 20s). Now in her 30s, Trang has sung the song again, but in English.

Trang is marking her decade of professional singing by creating something new and surprising for her audience. All of her hit songs have now been transcribed into English and performed with a Latin style.

Everyone says that Trang, the girl who loves to wear an ao dai (traditional long dress) with jeans and was given the name "Chocolate" because of the colour of her skin, wants to try her luck beyond the country's borders.

But Trang says that what she has done in her latest album, the Unmakeup, is a gift for local audiences.

When she participated in the Hattori Memorial Music Festival in Osaka in 2006, Trang won approval from foreign audiences there.

After the recent scandal in the media about Trang's miniskirt that she wore during a social outing, she wants more than ever to prove her real talent to the public.

Though there have been other singers with a Latin style, Trang, who graduated from the English Department of HCM City University of Foreign Languages and Technologies and the city's Music Conservatory, believes the new album and her renditions of songs will fire up audiences.

Several songs that have made her a well-known quantity composed by musicians Vo Thien Thanh, Quoc Bao and Luu Thien Huong are part of the album.

The slender singer started the project more than three years ago when she recorded her first English album in Germany with her team.

"It was the first time I had the pleasure to work with the all-German Band and with a talented sound engineer Sebastian in the famous city of Weimar," Trang recalled.

During the time in Germany, Trang had to get up at seven in the morning and work until 10pm every night.

Trang's manager, Cao Trung Hieu, her youngest brother, the person who always offers new ideas and consults on her singing style, named the album the Unmakeup.

"Don't misunderstand. This doesn't mean that I don't have my face made up or I am not well dressed while singing. What my youngest brother means is that we can find simplicity in each work of the album," she explained.

The entire album was made unplugged: no wires, strings, no electrical connections. It is simple and plain yet pleasurable and intricate once its core structure is dissected and explored.

Trang wrote one of the 10 songs, Cinderella, and performed with foreign musicians Roland Buettgen, Rainer Peter, Thomas Lieven and Vincent Nguyen. Though Trang sings of a fairy tale in her song, she gives it fire with a Latino music and singing style.

"I feel that my music and foreign language is mature when I work with a team of professional musicians," she said.

The fan of pop singers Shakira and Jennifer Lopez has released several albums, including Bon Mua Tinh Yeu (All Season Love), Chocolate, Socodance, Am Ban (The Negative) and Da Khuc (Serenade)

Trang is currently recording an album with songs combining modern and traditional styles, which will be issued in a few months.

Chocolate was born during a time when she was taking part in several musical competitions as a girl, which gave her more confidence to perform on the stage.

During her time in primary, secondary and high school as well as university, she was a key amateur singer at the schools.

At the age of 23, in 2001, she began her professional career after getting a second prize from HCM City Television's singing contest.

Friends say it's Trang's creativity and character that have brought her success and a stable position in Vietnamese show business.

Trang says she's happy with what she has achieved. Though she has never been listed among the top singers of the country, she is distinguished from others by her unique style. — VNS