VN, French artists exhibit lacquer paintings

Lacquer is the link between one artist from Vietnam and two from France at the painting exhibition “The Soul of Vietnamese Lacquer” at the HCM City Fine Arts Museum.

“Sau Giao Thua” (After Lunar New Year’s Eve), a painting by Vietnamese artist Nguyen Van Minh, is on display at the “Soul of Vietnamese Lacquer” exhibition at the HCM City Fine Arts Museum.
“Sau Giao Thua” (After Lunar New Year’s Eve), a painting by Vietnamese artist Nguyen Van Minh, is on display at the “Soul of Vietnamese Lacquer” exhibition at the HCM City Fine Arts Museum.

The exhibition displays 34 paintings by Nguyen Van Minh of HCM City, and Mitchell Pontie and Annick Tarbouriech of France.

Minh is showings six large paintings, reflecting his love for and attachment to the country. His subjects are children, women, landscapes, cultural festivals and people’s daily activities.

In his painting “Sau Giao Thua” (After Lunar New Year’s Eve), Minh depicts images of Vietnamese women and children dressed in ao dai going to school to pray for a happy new year.

The Dong Thap-born artist shows his nostalgia for his hometown through his painting “Que Toi” (Memory of my Homeland) with familiar images of banana trees and a cau khi (foot bridge) crossing a canal in Mekong Delta.

Born in 1965, Minh began his painting career in 1989 with a group exhibition in the Mekong region.

In 1992, he graduated in lacquer painting at HCM City Fine Arts University, and then became one of the most outstanding lacquer artists in the city.

He has introduced his Vietnamese lacquer works at exhibitions in France, Thailand, the Republic of Korea, Chile, and Singapore.

As a lecturer at the city’s Fine Arts University, he inspires both Vietnamese and foreigner to love the art.

His student Annick Tarbouriech is showing eight abstract paintings at the exhibition.

The French artist uses inlaid eggshells and mother-of-pearl in colours of gray, white, pink and green to give a mineral appearance to her paintings.

After finishing a work, the layers create images like islets on the paintings. She calls them Shagreen skin, Thinned-skin, and Shedskin.

Tarbouriech graduated in fine arts from Aix-en-Provence University in 1987, and became lecturer at the school from 1987 to 2010.

In 2010, she came to Vietnam to study lacquer techniques with Minh, and then had several group exhibitions with Vietnamese and French artists in both countries.

Pontie, whose mother is Vietnamese, depicts the coexistence of opposites in her 20 paintings, which combine both Vietnamese with European cultural heritage.

Pontie was born in Cho Lon (China Town in HCM City), and now lives and works in France and Vietnam.

She has held several solo and group exhibitions in France and Vietnam since 2007.

The exhibition will be open until July 27 at the Fine Arts Museum, 97A Pho Duc Chinh street in District 1.