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PAPER PAINTING
From "Vietnam Contemporary Art", 1996
By The Hanoi Fine Arts Publisher
Among the Vietnamese plastic arts, wood engraving is a long
standing traditional one. We have inherited from our ancients
from Dong Ho village a valuable tradition of wood engraving in
colour.
These engravings are appreciated by generation to generation and
have become an indispensable moral alimentation. Dong Ho images
have their place deep in the soul of the people and their
features have kept their sharpness in spite of the upheavals of
the times.
With colour as red as peony, as yellow as ripe paddy, as green
as a young rice plant the images have by themselves the taste of
rural areas in all their characteristic rusticity. The engraving
is always performed on the wood of persimon-tree, which is solf
and does not swell when dipped in water. In printing, starch
plays an important role. Mixed with starch a colouring matter
forms a solid and clear paste suitable for creation. Besides,
scallop shells give a typically Vietnamese gleam and constitute
a decorative element of printed pictures of a very simple
treatment. The genre of painting on paper using gouache, water
colour, pastel, ink, colour pencils, drawing charcoal, sauce
occupies an important position in Vietnamese painting. In many
cases, these pictures have been works of great artistical value,
and what is particularly precious is that they have expressed
the direct sensations of the painter before the objects,
sensations that cannot be repeated. Quite a few of these
painters have thus created representative works contributing to
the different stages of the history of painting. Sy Tot has
created the best of his gouache in the All children can study.
The composition of the picture is pyramidal, the drawing without
artifice, each figure is set off by light. It is surprising that
Sy Tot's style highly resembles that of Le Nain, although Sy Tot
has not even known Le Nain and his style stems merely from his
intuition.
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