Art & Entertainment News 30/12
Thai holy animal
statues exhibited in Da Lat resort city
A pair of dragon and peacock statues
made by Thai craftsmen are being put on show at the
The pair of statues are part of a
collection of holy animals statues that 270 Thai artisans worked together
throughout 369 days to create as a gift to Thai King Bhumibok Adulyadej on
the occasion of his 85th birthday anniversary.
The statues are made of silver and
bronze, plated with 24K gold and decorated with crystal and precious stones.
The dragon statue measures 132cm high, 114cm wide and weighs 88.5kg, while
the peacock is 170cm in height, 127cm in width, and weighs125kg.
The statues are exhibited together
with gemstones originated from
Da Lat is one of the most popular
resort cities in
Phu Tho Province
strives to protect singing troupes
Authorities of the northern Phu Tho
Province are exerting additional efforts to protect hat xoan (spring
singing), which has been designated part of UNESCO's intangible heritage
sites.
Ha Ke San, deputy chairman of Phu Tho
People's Committee, said that the province would promote research, teaching,
training and collection, as well as compiling information about the area's
heritage.
"Activities of the hat xoan
performance and popularisation will be promoted in the country.
Simultaneously, a project to restore and preserve xoan relics will be
started. In addition, an inventory of the xoan singing troupes in the
province will be created," said San.
He further said that Phu Tho had
financially supported the xoan singing troupes, including the art masters, to
train staff and organise activities for the preservation of the heritage.
The provincial department of culture
has been assigned to co-ordinate with the
Other agencies will refer to these
works in creating a plan involving the restoration, preservation and practice
of the singing in four original xoan communities in Phu Duc, Kim Doi, Thet
and An Thai, said San.
More than 60 veteran singers have
taken part in teaching young artists, including 100 teenagers in those xoan
communities, said renowned singer Nguyen Thi Lich.
San said that hat xoan would be
protected if the young artists were well trained.
He noted that the promotion of the
xoan heritage of the Hung Vuong worship religion, which was recognised as one
of the world's intangible heritages in 2012, should be connected to the
development of tourism through performances of xoan singing troupes.
This should be done from 2016 to
2020.
"We will try to share the hat
xoan in international exchanges. We aim to fully restore the traditional xoan
festivities by 2020," San added.
Xoan singing, or hat xoan, is a genre
of Vietnamese folk music performed in the spring, during the first two months
of the Lunar New Year or Tet in the northern province of Phu Tho.
Gia ra festival –
unique custom of Cor people
“Gia ra” is the biggest festival in a
year for the Cor ethnic minority group, who live mainly in the central
province of Quang Ngai’s Tay Tra and Tra Bong districts as they mark the end
of a rice crop, traditionally lasting one year.
The Gia ra festival, usually taking
place from the 10th to the 11th month on the lunar calendar, is important to
them just like the Lunar New Year holiday to the Kinh people, the ethnic
majority group in
After harvesting rice and placing all
the rice grains in the storage hut, the village elderly will choose good days
for the festival, intended as an occasion for all villagers to show their
gratitude to gods who gave them a bumper crop and have some leisure time
after hardworking days.
On the day before the festival, the
head of the family will wrap some rice grains in wild banana leaves, putting
one of these parcels at the rice storage hut and bringing home the other to
invite the rice soul to his house.
The family’s head will rub grains in
his hands and then put them on each family member’s head to wish for good
luck in the coming year. Women in the village gather to make glutinous rice
cakes wrapped in “dot” leaves to offer to ancestors and the gods of rivers,
streams, mountains, and forests.
At dawn of the first day of the
festival, the family’s head will invite gods and ancestors to join his family
during the three-day festival. He and his eldest son will sit in front of the
altar full of offerings such as rat meat, rice cakes, and alcohol, and say
the prayers for three times, namely “Mo Huyt am ba” (Mistress Huyt gives
rice), “Mo Rit am ba” (Mistress Rit gives rice), and “Mo Crai am ba”
(Mistress Crai gives rice). Then, they will place some cooked glutinous rice
grains on family members’ heads in order to keep the rice soul.
The Cor people believe that female
gods are busy from early morning like women, so rituals must be done early so
that they can begin their workday soon. Meanwhile, rituals worshipping male
gods and ancestors are usually done after 8am.
After worshipping male gods, a ritual
will be held to move the rice god from the house to the rice storage hut. For
this purpose, nine knots will be tied in a white thread resembling a ladder
for the rice god to climb to the rice storage hut on the field to watch over
the crop.
In the following days, more rituals
will be conducted to pay respect to different gods praying for prosperity,
good harvest and good animal breeding
The Cor people also believe that the
more guests a family receives during the Gia ra festival, the luckier they
are in the new year. Therefore, local residents always warmly welcome guests,
and people from nearby villages also come to visit and wish one another a
happy new year.
During Gia ra, natives also organise
folk games such as archery, wrestling, javelin, cake making, and rice
pounding, along with singing and dancing performances with traditional musical
instruments like Amap, a small panpipe used only by Cor women, and gongs.
In the past, each family took turn to
celebrate Gia ra festival, making the festival last for one or even two
months in a village. Nowadays, Gia ra has become much simpler and takes place
for only three days. It is also a chance to discuss preparations for a new
rice crop.
Korean stars
enthral
A number of famous Korean stars
enthralled
The event, featuring Taekwondo and
K-pop culture, consisted of two main parts, Taekwondo activities and a night
festival.
Taekwondo activities started at 1pm,
involving Korean comic artist Lee Kwang Deuk. The programme included a
Taekwondo class and Taekwondo talent contest for audiences.
A night festival began at 6pm with
performances of champions of K-pop Contests and K-pop FC Festivals.
Particularly, invited guests from the RoK including singers Jung Sung Hwan,
YJB, boyband NOM, and girlband Switch, also gave their first show in
Park Nark Jong, director of the
Korean Cultural Centre said that the event is a gift for Vietnamese audiences
who have contributed to the success of the cultural exchange activities
between
Researcher
releases book on Mong ethnic minority
A new book on the Mong ethnic group
has been published by the World Publishers.
Author Nguyen Manh Tien spent three
years travelling through northern mountainous regions to explore the Mong
people's way of life and language.
The book is titled Nhung Dinh Nui Du
Ca, which roughly translates as "Singing while Travelling over
Mountains".
Japanese drum band Bati-Holic will
perform in Ha Noi and the central city of Thanh Hoa between January 7 and 10
as part of the Japan Cultural Day.
The band performed in Ha Noi and
Bati-Holic were formed in 2004 in
The group bring a contemporary twist
to the music using traditional instruments.
The concert in Ha Noi will be held at
the Youth Theatre,
Two concerts in Thanh Hoa will take
place on January 9 and 10 in
Seminar to discuss
central region's traditional art
An international seminar on bai choi
singing will be held on January 13 in
The seminar is being held to
introduce and popularise the traditional art form, which originated in the
central region of
The two-day event will gather foreign
researches from France, Germany, Sweden, South Korea and Laos and Vietnamese
culture researchers from nine provinces and cities that are home to this folk
art.
The participants will discuss themes
related to the history and culture of the central region from the Quang Binh
to Khanh Hoa provinces as well as bai choi singing and the relationship
between traditional art and literature.
A proposal on ways to preserve and
restore bai choi will be tabled at the seminar. The participants will also
make a comparison between bai choi singing and similar genres around the
world.
The art form is often practised by
the people during the Lunar New Year Festival.
The seminar will be held by the Viet
Nam Institute of Musicology and
Millions head to
Central Highlands during tourism year
Six million visitors came to the
Central Highlands this year, National Tourism Year organisers have announced
at a ceremony in Da Lat.
Tourism promotion programmes brought
both foreign and domestic tourists, giving the locality the chance to turn
tourism into a key economic sector, minister of culture, sports and tourism
Hoang Tuan Anh said on Saturday at the ceremony, which also featured an art
show called "Love for the Central Highlands".
During the year, the culture ministry
and the local authorities organised more than 70 culture, sport and tourism
programmes in the provinces of Dak Lak, Gia Lai, Kon Tum, Dak Nong and Lam
Dong, where Da Lat is located. The programmes spotlighted traditional
instruments, folk singing, costumes, gongs, elephant racing and Lam Dong tea.
Next year's tours emphasise nature,
including forest- and sea-exploring tours and flower admiring excursions.
The number of visitors to the area
rose 14 per cent from last year. They included 400,000 foreigners, a 7 per
cent increase. Total income from tourism reached VND10 billion (US$4.7
million), a 12 per cent up from last year.
Da Lat, which hosted most of the
programmes, gathered 4.8 million visitors, 14.4 per cent more than last year.
At the ceremony, organisers handed
the hosting flag to representatives of the central
Film depicts
Japanese teacher's move to VN
Viet Nam Film Studio and its Japanese
partner Agro Picture next week wrap up shooting of a feature film based on
the biography of a Japanese woman living in
Cuoc Song Moi O Viet Nam (New Life in
Meritorious Artist Tat Binh, one of
the film's two executive directors, said his crew, both Vietnamese and
Japanese, spent several months preparing for filming.
"We worked with dozens of
experts in language, costume design, and props to improve their knowledge and
understanding how all of these fields in the film are important technically
and socially.
"Our film is a story of human
culture."
The film is about the life of a
Japanese teacher, Shaso Misao, who decided to take her 82-year-old mother to
live in Ha Noi.
The mother, Sasho Shizue, feels
completely at home in the city.
Both make many friends and learn
about Vietnamese culture from neighbours.
"Before writing the film's
script, I spent days reading books and magazines on
"I discovered that Vietnamese
are simple and compassionate."
The film has 37 Japanese actors,
cameramen and sound and light effects specialists besides some talented
Vietnamese actors like Tran Nhuong, Tran Hanh, Mai Chau, Diem Loc and Lan
Huong.
Post-production will be completed in
Ha Noi early next year.
Folk music
research wins award
Research on southern folk music (don
ca tai tu) by a teacher from Long An Province, Vo Truong Ky, won the Viet Nam
Folk Arts and Letters Association's highest award this year.
According to Prof To Ngoc Thanh,
chairman of the association, Ky's work provided comprehensive information on
the art's origins, history, genres and distinguished performers for other
researchers who are working on making a scientific dossier of the art. The
researchers will submit don ca tai tu for UNESCO recognition on the
Representative List of Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.
Thanh said that the more than 90
research works submitted for the annual awards focused on monitory ethnic
groups. Titles of the papers include: Legends on Families of Ta Oi Ethnic
Group, Traditional Culture of Thuy Group in
Earlier this year, the association
gave the honourable title of Art Master and Artisan to nine folk art
practitioners across the country who have handed down traditional songs,
instruments, ceremonies and languages to younger generations.
Book on
A
The book that Nguyen Huu Thong and
his associates published is titled Art in the Time of Nguyen Lords. Nguyen
Lords were predecessors of the Nguyen dynasty (1802-1945), and expanded the
country's territory in the south.
"Many studies have been
published on the heritage of the Nguyen dynasty, but studies on the lords are
rare," Thong said during a ceremony launching the book. "We expect
this book could fill part of the research gap."
The book's authors planned to
research all art and culture during the lords' time, but many of the vestiges
of the time period have been destroyed, which has made their work more
difficult. Data for the book was obtained in Quang Tri, Thua Thien-Hue and
Quang
Experts said the book would add to
existing resources on
Books on student
activists released
Two books on the patriotic movement
by Sai Gon's student activists during the war pediod between 1954 and 1975 in
Chung Ta Da Dung Day (We Were
Standing Up) has been compiled by members of the Ho Chi Minh Communist Youth
Union in
Hoang Don Nhat Tan, one of the
authors, said it took three years to collect all the documents and complete
the two books.
They feature memoirs of witnesses who
had participated in the anti-war movements in Sai Gon-Gia Dinh and are still
alive, and rare historical documents on the patriotic movement by Sai Gon
students, he added.
The series has been published by the
Tre (Youth) Publishing House to mark the 65th anniversary of Vietnamese
Students Day.
Each book costs VND540,000 and is
available in bookstores across the country.
VNA/VNS/VOV
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Thứ Ba, 30 tháng 12, 2014
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