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Glimmers of hope for Vietnamese to collect Vietnamese
artworks
After many
years of being almost exclusively oriented to foreign clients, some galleries
are finding appropriate ways to return to the potential of the local market.
Illustrative image.
The original methods they thought of
in the beginning included organizing a sales network, and having art
showcased at artist’s private homes or in the courtyards of some friendly
embassies, or at newly opened hotels. They also tried to understand and study
the psychology of Vietnamese clients in fine arts and sculpture.
A representative from this group has
a very interesting comment: Vietnamese people love feng shui and this suits
the style of lacquer artworks at the moment. The lacquer works are in warm colors,
which normally bring a feeling of prosperity. Perhaps the galleries can
follow this direction of thinking, and before talking about high quality
collecting, emphasize how contributing to the change of shopping for
decorative products in a middle-class Viet family is a way to once again to
restart the local art market.
Some people who have sold works to
Vietnamese said for many of them, once they like the works, they will pay
directly and won’t bargain like foreign clients.
Even a gallery owned by an American,
the
According to Mr. Thomas, Vietnamese
people like lacquer a lot so he decided to pay attention to this art medium
as a way to reach the potential audience. He has also prepared the staff for
a marketing campaign directed at local clients more strategically. This is
something he had never previously thought of since opening in 2006.
Following this direction, Quynh
Galerie (HCMC) is also seeking local marketing staff. Since their
establishment in December 2003, the most important staff from Quynh Galerie
have mostly been foreigners. According to the director of the gallery, Quynh
Pham, a Vietnamese-American woman, she expresses her wish and hope that the
corporations and large enterprises of
“This collecting can help keep great
valuable contemporary art works in the country,” said entrepreneur Bui Dinh
Than, who once had the renowned Duc Minh art collection.
Over one year ago, Quynh Galerie
opened a second location in the center in District 1,
However, they don’t have many
expectations from their own personal experience. On the occasion of a solo
exhibition at Mai Gallery at the end of 2014, artist Vu Duc Trung said most
of his local clients are friends who bought his works just for support.
The rest of them are foreign clients.
He hopes that maybe his daughter’s generation (born in 2010) can inherit a
new education which will teach them that art is truly essential for life.
That’s possible when there will be truly local collectors; only then we can
create a respectable local art market.
These are the thoughts of a person
with much experience with the art world outside of
Suzanne Lecht, art director of Art
Vietnam gallery, officially operating since 2003, has spoken about the
potential of the local art market. In an interview in 2013, she said that in
over 10 years of operating Art Vietnam, she had seen only three or four
Vietnamese people buying art at the gallery.
“
And to make these factors stronger
and be the foundation for the local art market, she said, “…the authorities
responsible for art in
Phong Van , VNN
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Thứ Hai, 16 tháng 3, 2015
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