To Ngoc Van celebrated with
exhibition
A celebration of 110th birthday
anniversary of To Ngoc Van (1906-1954), one of Viet Nam’s most influential
painters in the first half of the 20th century, has just been organised by
the Vietnam Fine Arts Association.
Two ladies and child (1944), oil and
canvas, by To Ngoc Van. The painting can be seen in the permanent exhibition
at Vietnam Fine Arts Museum.
“Painter To Ngoc Van’s imprint is an outlook that no
other painters have, which is integrating his personal feelings, thoughts and
trends into his work instead of just representing contemporary matters of
life”, says art critic Nguyen Hai Yen at the celebration.
“His motto is: A painting is not only beautiful in real
life but also in the manifestation of its creator’s inner feelings. Vân can
be seen embarking on expressing the role of an artist, not an inscriber of
facts, in his works,” she added.
Graduating from the Indochina Fine Arts College, To
Ngoc Van influenced many Vietnamese painters of later generations and has
been greatly appreciated by the art circle abroad. He was a talented painter
and became famous before the August Revolution in 1945, with his oil, lacquer
and silk paintings.
He was one of the pioneering painters to assimilate
Western methods in a creative way, and combined them with his inheritance of
national artistic traditions. He left us a number of works of high artistic
value including Young Woman with Lilly in 1943, Boats on the Perfume River in
1935 or Woman by a Lotus in 1944.
Following the National Resistance by President Ho Chi
Minh, To Ngoc Van and other renowned Vietnamese artists left Hanoi for the
liberated area and joined the artistic circle where he devoted all his talent
and experience to make his contribution to the long war. Also during that
period, he created many lacquer paintings and sketches portraying the
landscapes and lives of northwestern Viet Nam as well as watercolour
paintings depicting the land reform in 1953.
Together with painter Nguyen Do Cung (1912-1977), To
Ngoc Van was one of the artists that laid the foundation for Viet Nam’s
Theory and Criticism of Arts, contributing to the many talented painters of
the first generation of Viet Nam’s Arts.
He was unfortunately killed on his way to Dien Bien Phu
at the age of 48.
He was one of eight top-notch Vietnamese painters to be
awarded the Ho Chi Minh Prize for Literature and Art and the Independent
Order, 1st class in 1996.
VNS
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Chủ Nhật, 18 tháng 12, 2016
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