|
Museums receive more funds but still lack
artifacts, visitors
Museums in Vietnam have become a hot topic after the
local media reported about plans for the VND11 trillion National
History Museum
project in Hanoi and the HCM
City Museum
project in HCM City.
While people are paying attention to
the huge capital required for these projects, experts question whether the
museums have enough artifacts to display.
Many museums, few visitors
Hanoi Museum.
The HCM
City Museum,
located in the History – Culture
Park in Long Binh Ward,
District 9 will cover 15.45 hectares.
Why does the city wants to build a
new museum although it has had the municipal museum on Ly Tu Trong Road? Le Ton Thanh, Deputy
Director of the HCM City Department of Culture, said that HCM City
plans to develop toward the east. The new museum will be built in the city’s
east to await this trend. The museum must be modern, from its design to
display. In the future, the Southern Natural Museum will also be built in the
district to create a complex of museums.
The HCM
City Museum
will be one of the latest museums contributing to a total of 147 museums in Vietnam
today.
Since 2005, Vietnam has had 32 new
museums, including those with huge investment, for example the Hanoi Museum
worth more than VND3 trillion in Hanoi, the Museum of Quang Ninh Province
worth VND900 billion. However, the largest ever museum project in Vietnam is the National History
Museum with the
estimated cost of up to VND11,277 billion.
However, it is a paradox that the
more museums are built, the fewer visitors they attract.
Of the seven museums managed by the
HCM City Department of Culture, the War Remnants
Museum is the busiest,
with around 2,000 visitors/day during the peak season. The other museums have
a small numbers of visitors, averaging several hundred visitors per day.
The newly opened museums are in a
worse situation. The Vietnam Literature Museum
which opened in Hanoi
in late May has only several visitors a day.
The Hanoi Museum,
the country’s largest and most expensive museum, welcomes dozens of
visitors/day. The museum staff said it was only crowded during holidays or at
the end of school year.
Lack of artifacts
For HCM
City, several museums do not have
sufficient space to display their collections, for example, the Vietnam History
Museum and the War Remnants
Museum. The city wants
to build the new museum to deal with this problem.
However, most of other museums do not
have enough artifacts for display. The Hanoi Museum
is a typical example.
After five years of operation, the
first and second floors of this museum are empty. The items displayed on the
3rd and 4th floor are sparse and simple. The most eye-catching zone is the
collection of a private collector Mr. Vu Tan.
The discrepancy between the
appearance of museums and the inside content was pointed out by the Minister
of Culture, Sports and Tourism Hoang Tuan Anh: "If we invest VND1 in the
appearance of museums, we just spend VND0.3-0.5 in their contents.”
Prof. Dr. Nguyen Van Huy - Former
Director of the Vietnam
Ethnology Museum,
a member of the National Cultural Heritage Council, said that the biggest
mistake was the plan for museum building.
Huy said museums are cultural works
but they are not built by cultural agencies. As a result, after the museums
are built, they do not fit with the content on display.
Huy cited the Hanoi
Museum and Quang Ninh
Museum as examples. The
first was built by the Hanoi Construction Department and the second by the
Quang Ninh Province Cultural Work Management Board. Both museums need
improvement to fit the contents on display.
The question of when the VND11.27
trillion National
History Museum
will be built has not been finalised.
Dr. Nguyen Van Huy said: "In my
opinion, we should not talk a lot about the money. A museum worth thousands
of billion dong is worthy to be built if it has attractive contents. For the National History
Museum, if we do not change the
construction mechanism, it will exist under the same circumstances as the Hanoi Museum, and that would be a big
waste."
Thanh Van,VNN
|
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét