Showing posts with label ethnic groups. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ethnic groups. Show all posts

Friday, January 21, 2011

Ethnology museum celebrates Tet with diverse programme

Ethnology museum celebrates Tet with diverse programme

The Vietnam Museum of Ethnology will hold its annual Tet (Lunar New
Year) celebrations on February 6-8, with music, food and games – and the
participation of 90 representatives from six ethnic groups from around
the country.


The Raglai from the central province of
Ninh Thuan and the Dao Lo Gang and Na Mieo from the northern province
of Lang Son will be participating in the holiday programme for the
first time.


Traditional performances will include gong
ceremonies of the Raglai, prayers for peace and good crops by the Na
Mieo, Tay and Dao Lo Gang, the lion dance of the Nung, and the bamboo
pole dance of the Thai, as well as calligraphy, water puppetry of the
Kinh majority.


Kids will be able to join in a variety of
folk games, including swinging, wrestling, walking on stilts, chess
playing and stick pushing. They also be able to make their own folk toys
under the instruction of ethnic people, including making figurines and
pinwheels.


This year, visitors will be able to enjoy
traditional food from the Tay ethnic group, such as roast pig with mac
mat (a type of wild leaf), steamed glutinous rice, dried buffalo meat
and traditional cakes.


About 150 student volunteers will join museum staff in helping visitors enjoy the events.


The events would help preserve and popularise the precious cultural
traditions of Vietnam , said museum director Vo Quang Trong.


Visitors would gain a better understanding of the cultures of the
different ethnic groups, as well as join in the spirit of the
festivities, Trong said./.

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Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Exhibition revels in diversity

The cultures and diversity of Southeast Asia are on display in a new
exhibition of lacquerware and Indonesian glass paintings entitled “A
Glimpse of Southeast Asia” that opens at the Vietnam Museum of Ethnology
in Hanoi.


The art of glass painting originated in
Europe but was introduced to Indonesia in the early 20th century by
the Dutch, flourished there during the 1930s. Artists paint on the
reverse side of the glass, with the first stroke on the glass seen in
the foreground of the image as paintings are viewed through the glass.


The new exhibition aimed to increase public understanding of the links
among Vietnamese ethnic groups and those of Southeast Asia as a whole,
which together form both a unity and a diversity of cultures, according
to museum director Vo Quang Trong.


In preparation for the exhibition, museum staff travelled throughout the region collecting objects and materials, added Vo.


"We were met with excitement and collaboration from cultural
institutions, museums, researchers, private collectors, and many people
who are keen to preserve their cultures," he said.


The
collections were particularly enriched by objects donated by Prof Kaneko
Kazushige from Japan , Prof Le Thanh Khoi from France , and Rosalia
Sciortino and O'ong Maryono from Italy . The resulting exhibition is
based on a Vietnamese-French project entitled Enhancement of Vietnamese
Museum's Heritage, organised by the French Embassy in Vietnam and
the Vietnam Academy of Social Sciences.


Since 2005,
French experts have participated in designing and giving professional
advice on exhibit space. They have also worked with the museum staff on
selecting objects, photographs and films, making suggestions, editing
texts and captions, shaping the catalogue and designing graphic forms,
said Christine Hemmet, curator of France 's Branly Museum .


A Glimpse on Southeast Asia also celebrates the occasion of the
museum's 15th anniversary and will run through October 5 of next year.
With the opening of the Kite Building , currently under
construction, the exhibition will be expanded to include costumes and
other exhibits on the religion, performing arts and social lives of the
region's ethnic groups./.

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Monday, September 20, 2010

Ethnic Culture-Tourism Village makes debut

Ethnic Culture-Tourism Village makes debut

Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung has asked Hanoi and other localities
in the nation to build the Culture-Tourism Village of Vietnamese ethnic
groups in Son Tay district of Hanoi into an attractive destination for
foreign and domestic tourists.


Addressing the
opening ceremony of the village in Hanoi on Sept. 19, PM Dung said
that the village has helped enrich the nation’s culture.


Culture is the society’s spiritual foundation, said PM Dung, noting
that the Party and the State always pay attention to preserving and
promoting cultural identity.


Together with the
State’s investment, all economic sectors should be encouraged to invest
in cultural activities to help boost national development, said the PM.


The opening ceremony was attended by Party General
Secretary Nong Duc Manh, Deputy Prime Minister Nguyen Sinh Hung,
Chairman of the Vietnam Fatherland Front Central Committee Huynh Dam,
Minister of Culture, Sports and Tourism (MCST) Hoang Tuan Anh,
Minister and Chairman of the Committee for Ethnic Minority Affairs Giang
Seo Phu, Chairman of the Hanoi People’s Committee Nguyen The Thao,
cultural researchers and village patriarchs from across the country.


Located on a 1,544-ha area in Dong Mo
, Son Tay district, the village is a complex of traditional
Vietnamese architectures, highlighting unique characteristics of the
national culture.


The Vietnamese Ethnic
Culture-Tourism Village project, approved by the Prime
Minister in 2008, aims to honour and preserve the cultural value of
Vietnam ’s 54 ethnic minority groups and promote Vietnam ’s
images to the world. It is also expected to become the nation’s culture,
sports, and tourism centre featuring Vietnamese cultural heritage and
meet the public’s demands for recreation.


On the
threshold of the Thang Long – Hanoi millennial anniversary, the
opening of the village is a politically, culturally, and socially
significant event to meet the public’s demand for preserving the
nation’s cultural value.


On the same day, there
were a variety of activities including a ceremony to honour the crafts
villages of 54 ethnic minority groups, an exhibition showcasing products
of the ethnic groups, and cultural exchanges between ethnic groups./.

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Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Folk culture research projects announced

Folk culture research projects announced

The Vietnam Folk Arts Association announced 2,000 research projects on
the folk culture of Vietnamese ethnic groups at a press briefing in
Hanoi on Aug. 31.


The projects were selected from almost 5,000 researches carried out over
the past 40 years, according to President of the association To Ngoc
Thanh.


Addressing the event, Phung Huu Phu, Permanent Deputy
Director of the Commission for Information and Education under the Party
Central Committee, said that with 54 ethnic groups, Vietnamese people
enjoy a plentiful and diversified culture. Those projects fortified the
cultural traditions of the nation, he said.


In 2008-2012, the
association plans to publish 1,000 research projects covering five
fields: knowledge and behaviour to environment; agricultural production
with relations between people and nature; customs and practices;
religions; and the achievements of literature and arts.


By the
end of 2009, 100 research projects were published and in 2010 another
200 others are expected to come to the public. Each published project
has a summary in English at the back.


The association plans to
set up a website featuring the research projects, to introduce the
traditional and unique Vietnamese culture to online audience.


The
publications will be presented to local and central libraries, as well
as Vietnamese embassies, Vietnamese cultural centres abroad and some
international organisations in Vietnam./.

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