Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Vietnamese artist. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Vietnamese artist. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Thứ Năm, 29 tháng 9, 2016

Can not believe in your eyes - 3D goldfish painting by Vietnam artist Le Thang

 
3D Goldfish Painting by Vietnam artist Le Thang - www.eyegalleryvn.com 

Born in 1986

Many private collections in France , USA , United Kindom , Japan , Hong Kong , Singapore , Australia ...

From a source of inspiration by great master Riusuke Fukahori , Talented artist Le Thang started the first series in 2013 with the three-dimensional goldfish painting in resin and painted with acrylic paint . After a few years he developed his resin technique , you will not believe your eyes – some people thought that the artist put the real fish into resin … but all details of the goldfish are painted meticulously , layer by layer , he creates the image so breathtalingly details - hyper-realistic sculptures , 3D painting optical effect and brings lifelike moments . He can create the most amazing works and make almost anything come to breath .

With oriental traditions , goldfish have always been a very potent Feng Shui symbol for attracting wealth and luckiness . The meaning of goldfish in Chinese words are “ Gold and Abundance” , that is reason why many Chinese keep goldfish at their homes . In Chinese the word “Yu” means fish but also means in success in business – keep goldfish in home in the Feng Shui tradition is a way of attracting prosperity .

Thứ Ba, 31 tháng 5, 2016

Arts Exhibition to honor Buu Chi

Hanoi life through French eyes

To mark the tenth anniversary of the death of Vietnamese artist Buu Chi on Friday the Fine Arts Association of Thua-Thien Hue Province will host a painting program at 26 Le Loi Street, Hue City.

The show includes paintings, most of which are made of oil on canvas. Visitors can learn more about fine arts, life, human fate and the obsession of time in his paintings.

Born in 1948 in Hue City and graduating from Law Faculty, Hue University in 1971, Buu Chi was famous before 1975 with a series of paintings by pen nib, black ink, denouncing war crimes, Saigon’s prison system and calling for peace and freedom. Later he moved to oil on canvas and became famous due to his creativeness and bold ideas.

He also took part in solo and group exhibitions worldwide.

* Photographer Sebastien Laval’s exhibition entitled “Hanoi 18h/6h” will open at Hanoi’s French Cultural Centre L’Espace today, reports VietnamPlus.

The exhibition will feature a series of photos depicting Hanoi’s streets with unusual lights and colors of the night which the artist took from 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. over a number of years.

Laval and his photographs are familiar to Vietnamese audiences courtesy of his many exhibitions at L’Espace and at the Hue Festival. His works present another view of Hanoi at night when lamps light street corners, unveiling new colors and new constructions.

The exhibition will last through to January 13 at the center, 24 Trang Tien Street in Hanoi.

Van Tho, as an instance in painting

The aspiration to revive fresh, innocent emotions of childhood or return to the instinctive life in every human bing does not solely belong to the industrialized, scientific rationalist West; it is omnipresent in the world now that the market economy is step by step infiltrating into everybody's mind, and humanitarian life is more and hampered by the pursuit of wealth and pragmatic apathetic calculations.

Artist Van Tho is seemingly aware of the weariness suffered by this mundane world and himself. And he tries to isolate himself from reality to take refuge in the purified, peaceful realm, which is fine art.

Vietnam Artist Van Tho  Self Portrait by Van Tho
Van Tho is lucky enough to preserve the sincerity and artlessness of a writer or an artist. He boldly departs from rules and conventions, breaks through the previous aesthetic barrier put up by himself to a style of painting which is liberal, instinctive, complex-free, like children's drawings.

He also learns from children the way to come up with a topic for painting in any place, from simple, daily stories to details of man's behavior in everyday life. These may be minor or momentary in the adult's view, but really have a certain meaning in children's mind, viz, the getting dressed, braiding hair, going for a walk all by oneself or more seemingly important events such as: "I got a distinction, Uncle", "Baby is Toddling", "Preparation for a Visit to the Public Garden"....All this may serve as a pleasure, an inspiration for painting.

And he sets about drawing as easily as children starting a game on a happy Sunday. He rejoices at using colors, fabricate fanciful "fine-art" stories utilizing any theme, any fleeting idea in his mind, provided that he could bring his game to an end and immensely release himself, not caring about refinery, prudence or perfection. Sometimes, Van Tho leaves in his pictures occasional patches of coarse, raw colors or scribbling brush strokes, now accidentally now intentionally yet this is always a plentiful freshness of colors and full freedom in creation.

In find Van Tho's taste in fine art so close to Matisse's. This is evidenced by his primary dazzing wild palette or purely eye-pleasing and relieving decoration. At the same time, Picasso's influence bold transformation of figures and a marked primitive imspiration. Van Tho often paints wild, crumpled, disfigured faces, and fictitious, distorted human figures, added here and there by a savage, mystic eye or a rough, weird hand.

The encounter with Picasso and modernist aesthetics has been observed among several Vietnamese young artists, like Tran Trong Vu, Le Quang Ha, Dang Xuan Hoa, Ha Tri Hieu, in the different periods of their creation. We may say that this is quite natural for the following reason:

Vietnam Artists
"Portrait Of Mr. Ham" by Van Tho
The aesthetic revolution of Western modernist artists at the dawn of the 20th century is precisely the relinquishment of rigid, fastidious academic lessons to revert to instinctive art so natural, simple and richly-intuitive. This "primitivization" of artistic language leads to a starting approach close to folk art and children's art. However, the return to a "primitive" as one likes is truly difficult, especially with rationalist Western artists. Many of them, while coming back to instinctive art in an extreme manner, distorted figures weirdly, extravagantly, as in a number of cases of expressionism. The Vietnamese painters' return to instinctive art is mush effortless, as easy as pie, because they art not under the weight of academic art and are surrounded by a living environment imbued with folksiness. No need to go anywhere, they almost instantly meet modern, up-to-date elements in their traditional art rich in folk characters.

Let's talk about Van Tho's art again. He is complexfree and does not waver before outer influences, tardy as they are. He openly expresses his sympathy and friendly response to Matisse, Picasso and the Western modernist artisrs who were the pioneers in the effort to emancipate art from the imposition of traditional concepts and paved the way for freedom to experiment any ideas or media. Van Tho painted the still-life "Nenuphar Flowers 2002" in Matisse's style with a note dedicated to "Les modernes" and Matisse, thus conveying his sympathetic feeling to them. Furthermore, he solemnly drew Picasso's portrait according to his imagination, as a gesture to show his admiration for this talented champion in painting.

Renovation is a natural need of creative work and artists. Van Tho is now at the meeting point of modernist art influences with their "primitive" tendency and children's art, in which he feels himself rejuvenated with the fresh, generous folk palette which is rich in conventional decorative patterns and expresses the most primitive, affectionate and simplest feelings of humans.

Besides, he himself feels satisfaction in experiencing free creative work and practising art for recreation and relaxation.

Bui Nhu Huong

Art History Research and Art Critic

From the Art Magazine No.72 of Vietnam Arts Association