CHANGING TIME
Asian Art News, 1997
By Ian Findlay and Helene Hagemans
Vietnamese art scene is being driven not only by clear
commercial considerations, but also by artists and dealers
committed to creating and promoting quality work.
Less than a decade ago, contemporary Vietnamese art and artists
had little resence in their own country and virtually none on
the international art scene. Yet, just four years ago, the
eminent critic and painter Ca Le Thang reported in the
Vietnamese art journal My Thuat, "In 1992 a total of
130 groups and one man exhibitions were opened in Ho Chi Minh
City, featuring works by local (Vietnamese) artists ... and even
(artists)from overseas. Over 5,500 works created by more than
200 artists were exhibited in 25 different locations; attendance
numbers rose to over 400,000." In that year, the first
exhibition of Vietnamese abstract painting took place. During
the same period, equally dramatic changes were taking place in
Ha Noi.
Since then the transformation of the Vietnamese art world has
continued apace. It has not only been in the profile which the
nation's art and artists have achieved th at is impressive, but
also in the quality and scope of the art and its representation
through local, regional, and international galleries and
museums, as well as the extremely important exchanges between
the Queensland College of Art, Brisbane, and the University of
Fine Art, Ha Noi, and the visionary Indochina Arts Projects
spearheaded by David Thomas in the United States.
Although during the past two years there has been a decline in
sales locally, the galleries-and a number of important
collectors-remain at the heart of the drive to promote art in
the major cities of Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City, and Hue. Estimates
as to the number of galleries in these cities vary widely since
many are really no more than shop. In the major cities there are
some 50 quite professional galleries. The Art that they handle
ranges from highly popular landscape and figurative work to
abstract and experimental work in lacquer and other mediums.
The sheer number of artists producing work is quite astonishing
and this has helped to maintain the pace of development in the
market. Many of the exciting artists who rose to prominence over
the past decade are still active. At the same time, much
commonplace work has been produced which has had an adverse
effect on the reputation of some of the galleries. But more
artists of distintion - Do Quang Em, Khuu Duc (ceramicist),
Nguyen Quang Huy, Dang Xuan Hoa, Pham Luan, Tran Luu Hau, Nguyen
Van Cuong, Nguyen Tu Nghiem, Tran Luong, Le Quang Ha, Thanh
Chuong and Pham Quang Vinh, for example - are being shown abroad
regularly. At the first Asia-Pacific Triennial of Contemporary
Art in 1993 in Brisbane, Australia, Nguyen Xuan Tiep represented
Vietnam. In 1996, three artists took part - Vu Dan Tan, Dang Thi
Khue, Mai Anh Dung - to much acclaim.
Now that so many artists have had first-exposure to a broad
range of Asian and Western art, there are some significant
points of difference between their work and that of those who
have had no exposure to other influences at all. The differences
can be as subtle as the manner in which paintings are marketed
and exhibited or as conspicuous as style and the handling of
materials or simply the risks they take with their themes. While
painting is the mainstay of the art scene, sculpture and
ceramics are also becoming more visible. Photography, however,
is perhaps the most visible of new developments, with
exhibitions becoming more frequent. A number of photographers
have had the opportunity to study in the West, which has also
helped to raise awareness of Vietnam's own fine photographic
past.
There are no new major trends within the contemporary
Vietnamese art world as yet. But there are rumblings.
Installation and performance art are now beginning to be seen,
albeit on a small scale. As Vietnamese artists travel more and
are exposed to fresh influences, these art forms will certainly
be seen more frequently. But, if one can speak of a trend, then
it is to tradition that one must look. Lacquer painting has a
long history in Vietnam, but it is only fairly recently that a
broad range of artists have taken to it as a regular medium
through which to express themselves in a contemporary manner. Vu
Thang, the dynamic Hanoi artist, showed recently at Trang An
Gallery just how powerful lacquer work, mixed with other media,
can be. Lacquer is a good "example of using tradition in a
contemporary context," says Pham Quang Vinh.
Many artists are still producing semiabstract and figurative
work for the market. But there are some never names around. Tran
Van Thao and Do Hoang Tuong are considered two of the most
interesting and promising painters currently working in Ho Chi
Minh City. Thao, before 1992, painted nature scenes and
landscape but is now inspired by "my remembrances of the war.
Abstraction is the only style in which I can express my
feelings."
Artist's group such as the "Gang of Five," in Hanoi, and "Recent
Works" group, in both Ho Chi Minh City and Hanoi, continue to
work together and their members are known overseas. Foreign
artists' exchanges such as the Dutch-Vietnamese workshop, "Dalat
Dialogue," in 1995, and "April Colors," in Hue, in 1996,
included artists from America, France, Australia, Japan, and
Vietnam. The presence of foreign artists which includes Eric
Leroux (France), Nguyen Cam (France), Russell Craig (Australia),
Bradford Edwards (the United States), Maritta Nurmi (Finland),
and Veronika Radulovic (Germany) - has initiated, at grassroots
level, exchanges which will be felt for a long time to come.
The changes in Vietnam's current art scene have been welcomed by
most artists. There is also greater enthusiasm, an elevated
sense of self-confidence and defection among the artists, the
vast majority of whom are men. There are different pressures
now, though, and different standards. "In the past, I made more
works, now I do less," says the artist Le Quang Ha. "I spend
more time on one painting. In the past, I was perhaps not so
careful in my work."
"Five to ten years ago, the art was terrible, but since the
Government has opened up, the quality has improved. For me the
best time to be an artist is now, in Hanoi," says Thanh Chuong,
one of the most important contemporary lacquer artists. "Now
artists have better skills, there are now more styles than
before. Now there is more choice. In the past, if someone asked
a painter to paint a picture, they told the artist what to
paint. Sometimes a number of artists worked on one painting. I
can now do what I like and use my own ideas. It is a good time
for Vietnamese artists. Artists are now more independent. The
artists' ways of selling their work have changed. Some artists
paint and sell immediately. Others hold onto their works."
These are the sentiments expressed by many young professional
artists. To meet the greater sophistication, not only of the
country's major collectors, but also the international art
community's expectations of high standards, is definitely now an
important driving force among artists. It is a question of
improving or be left behind; taking a professional approach is
more important than ever before.
"Artists have improved their skills. Now there are many more
artists so they have to improve their skills if they are to
survive as artists. Artists in Hanoi are much more open-minded
and they think more about their work. Now it is easier for
artists to go abroad and so they are able to see what is
happening elsewhere," says Pham Minh Tuan. "At this time,
artists have a better understanding about themselves. They can
live off their art now and don't need other jobs." But living
off one's work is not easy. While prices in Hanoi and Ho Chi
Minh City command between US$400 and US$3,000, a dealer may take
20% on the sale. But few dealers will handle work on
consignment. They prefer to buy, which means that the artist
might not obtain the best price for his work.
There are two quite distinct markets for contemporary
Vietnamese art: local and international, although there is also
a growing interest among some regional collectors, particularly
in HongKong, where Gallerie La Vong leads the way with quality
shows, Singapore, and Japan. The purchasing trends have changed,
too, though the major buyers in some galleries tend still to be
foreigners, individuals and overseas museums.
"During the past five years, we have sold a lot of paintings. I
would say tat 95% of the buyers have been foreigners. Many
Vietnamese do collect art, but as the economy improves, we
expect to see many more," says Nguyen Lai of Hanoi's Nam Son
Gallery. "Vietnamese are influenced by other countries,
certainly. But they have their own style and preferences and
these are not really influenced by overseas ideas. The culture
and environment is quite different."
Salon Natasha, the first gallery in Vietnam to be opened by a
foreigner, Natasha Kraevskaia, took "different art" to its heart
from the outset. Showing such artists as Vu Dan Tan, Truong Tan,
and Le Hong Thai (a member of the International Association of
Lacquer Painters, in Japan), as well as a host of foreign
artists, Kraevskaia as followed the belief that her gallery
should have "a special spirit and atmosphere, and represents the
reluctance to separate the world of art from daily life."
Cyril
Lapointe, of the Red River Gallery, Hanoi, notes also the
changes in the people who are buying art, as well as those
affecting the artists at a more personal level." The majority
who buy are Westerners, many of them already resident in Asia,"
he says. " When I stated the gallery (two and-a-half years ago,
my clientele was expatriate. About a year ago, I began to have
local Vietnamese collectors buying. Now there are museums and
institutions and government ministries buying more art. I see
Vietnamese companies buying young Vietnamese artists work.
"Artists now are more professional. And the relationship between
artists and galleries has changed as it has done with overseas
galleries and museums and collectors. For the moment, the best
artists who will continue to be there are those who can cope
with the changes. Yet, with all the changes there are few
artists who deal politics and social changes in their work"....
"In the past, collectors perhaps looked at it only as an
investment," says Thanh Chuong, "now they are looking at the art
for itself." Collectors are at the heart of the Vietnamese art
world, corporate as well as individual. These men and women are
responsible for maintaining private collections that might
otherwise have gone abroad. Do Huy Bac and Tran Hau Tuan, to
name but two of the most active, have built impressive
collections. Both Bac and Tuan highlight one ofpainters and to
bring it home... . the most important trends in contemporary
Vietnamese art which is that they are now traveling overseas to
purchase the work of leading Vietnamese
Trying to predict the future is always dangerous. Yet it is
possible to see with some measure of clarity what the near
future may hold. As the economic situation improves, a strong
and constant sale base will be established in the market. The
decline of the market over the past two years has led to a more
moderate pricing system across the board. One might expect to
see more installation art being made, as well as more sculpture
and ceramics. As more artists are shown overseas and come into
contact with foreign artists working and exhibiting in Vietnam,
we will see fresh flights of imagination and strong individual
visual statements...