Showing posts with label Bien Bridge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bien Bridge. Show all posts

Monday, December 6, 2010

Exhibition spotlights nation's fine arts

The best examples of Vietnamese fine arts produced during the past
five-year period are on show at an exhibition of 836 artworks in Hanoi.


The National Fine Arts Exhibition is held every five
years to review and assess the state of Vietnamese fine arts. The works
awarded and displayed at the exhibition are selected from 5,000 entries
nationwide.


They show the creativity, skill and increasing professionalism of Vietnamese artists.


The works on show include paintings, graphics, installations and
sculptures that reflect different perspectives on contemporary life and
society.


Tran Khanh Chuong, president of Vietnam Fine Arts
Association, who is also deputy head of the organising board, says "The
exhibition presents many works by artists during the renewal process
who are creating a positive movement in Vietnam fine arts and
sculpture. This is the most important event of Vietnam fine arts
this year."


Forty-eight awards were granted including three gold medals, six silver medals, nine bronze and 30 consolation prizes.


The gold medals went to Vu Cuong for Mam Da (Stone's Buds), oil on
canvas; Nguyen Truong Linh for Hanoi Co Cau Long Bien (Hanoi Has Long
Bien Bridge) lacquer; Nguyen Quoc Thang for Nhung La Thu Thoi Chien (War
Letters), bronze sculpture.


Linh's painting was not the
only one at the exhibition featuring Long Bien Bridge , but he is
the winner thanks to different point of view and style of colours, says
painter Le Anh Van.


Long Bien Bridge is portrayed
as a grandiose construction with buttresses painted in dark and light
colours. In contrast, the painter describes the lives of small people
living around it.


The bronze sculpture of Thang tells a
long story of a cruel war. The visitors can see an image of a soldier on
guard, protecting the country. He lets fly with letters amid the
gunfire and smoke. The sad eyes of a woman waiting for the letters – his
wife or his mother – haunts people.


The oil painting Mam
Da reflects life in a mountainous region. Despite the hard life, people,
children and cattle are still energetic.


Rural power: The
oil on canvas Mam Da by Vu Cuong, which shows the power and vitality of
the people in mountainous regions, was granted the Gold Medal.


Vi Kien Thanh, head of the Fine Arts, Photography and Exhibition
Department, says "The quality of the work is quite even, so it was
challenging for the jury and organising board to select the
representative works for the exhibition.


"The artists show
a wide variety and diversity of themes, styles and media. Through the
artworks, they express their inner feelings.


"Many people
think that all cities and provinces in the country have artworks
displayed at the exhibition because this is the national event but
actually, we couldn't select any artworks from nine.


"In
the previous exhibition, the organising board tried to show
representative works of all cities and provinces, but since this year
only the most excellent ones are honoured."


The exhibition will run until Dec. 8 at the Vietnamese Culture and Arts Exhibition Centre, 2 Hoa Lu Street , Hanoi .


After being displayed in Hanoi , the exhibition will be taken to HCM
City Fine Arts Museum and displayed between January 10-26./.

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Thursday, November 18, 2010

Bridge to become open-air gallery

The Long Bien Bridge Festival opens this weekend with more events and
performers than ever, according to festival founder and organiser Nguyen
Nga.


Nga, an overseas Vietnamese living in
France , is busy completing final preparations for the festival, to be
entitled Dragon Bridge .


The festival will be
closed to motor vehicle traffic and will become an outdoor art gallery,
featuring an exhibition of contemporary arts, including paintings by
disabled children and children affected by Agent Orange, as well as
woodblock art and a collection of kites by artisans from Hanoi and the
northern province of Hai Duong.


The festival
will also feature an exhibition of photographs, documents and other
artefacts depicting national defence over the past 10 centuries.
Throughout the length of the 1,682m bridge, it will be divided into ten
sections representing the 10 centuries (1010-2010) of Hanoi , each
section brought to life by diverse art forms, antiquities and costumes,
representing the lifestyles of the people of the time.


" Long Bien Bridge is alive," said Nga. "It's not only in the
memory of Hanoians, but it is also the bridge of the resistance, the
bridge of pains and sufferings, the bridge of happiness, the bridge of
loves, and the bridge of peace and freedom.


"It's
the flesh and the blood of the Hanoians, an umbilical cord between past
and present, between Hanoi , the country, and the world."


For the festival, the bridge will be divided into three areas. The
eastbound side of the bridge (the northern span) will become the
Bridge of Memories and will symbolise people of courage. The
eastbound side (the southern span) will be decorated with the flags of
70 countries and territories and animated by street performers.
Symbolising peace and friendship, this side will be called "The Bridge
of Dreams".


The highlight of the festival will be a
concert and light show on the bridge on Nov. 21, to be broadcast live on
television. Two musical pieces composed by French musicians as gifts
for the Long Bien Festival – On the Long Bien Bridge and See Hanoi –
will be presented by artists from Vietnam National Academy of Music and
the Flonflons troupe from France and Belgium .


The festival's general director, People's Artist Le Hung, said, "The
designer of Long Bien Bridge is also the designer of the Eiffel
Tower , which is a world-famous tourist attraction, so why we can't
turn Long Bien Bridge into a bridge for tourism? The festival
was initiated with that goal in mind, so I agreed to be the general
director of the event."


During the event, the organising board will also raise funds for flood victims in the central region./.

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Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Photos capture bridge's essence

Long Bien Bridge , famous for its unique architecture and long
history, has been an inspiration for many artists zoith , One of the
latest American photographer Douglas Jardine.


He
displays his black-and-white photos of the bridge until on Nov. 12 at an
exhibition titled Long Bien Bridge – The Connection at Maison
des Arts, Van Mieu Street , Hanoi .


Hanoi 's
Long Bien Bridge was built in 1903 by French architect Gustave
Eiffel, the man who, 14 years, earlier, designed the Eiffel tower.


In fact the iron latticework used on the bridge reflects the style of the Eiffel tower.


When built, the bridge was called the Doumer Bridge , after Paul
Doumer – the Governor General of French Indochina and later the French
president. At the time, it was one of the longest bridges in Asia with
a length of 1,682m.


During the American War, the
bridge was the highest-priority target in northern Vietnam for US
bombers. This was because all supplies moving by rail from China and
Hai Phong crossed into the city over the bridge.


The
first bombing raids in August, 1967 dropped three of the bridge's 19
spans into the river. From that date until January, 1973, the bridge was
repeatedly bombed and repaired.


But despite putting
the bridge out of commission for long periods of time, the US never
succeeded in fully halting the flow of supplies into the city, which
continued to move over an improvised network of pontoons, bamboo rafts,
and other makeshift devices.


Nguyen Nga, owner of
Maison des Arts, said she hoped the bridge will remain a place of
cultural and artistic importance, linking Vietnam to countries
across the world.


"The bridge spans the banks of the
Hong (Red) River, it also spans the banks of memory and history," says
Jardine. "When we stand on the bridge, we are connected to the past and
we gaze at the future."


Jardine, 34, who is married to
a Hanoian woman, now works as director of Academic Affairs at the
Faculty of International Studies at Hanoi University .


Jardine visits Long Bien Bridge four or five times a week to
enjoy the view and take photos of the bridge and the life around it.
With his black-and-white photography, he likes to capture people close
up.


Sometimes, they don't want to be photographed, so he spends time talking to them to capture their stories./.

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