|
THE
LIFE OF ARTISTS IN VIET NAM
From "Young Artist of Vietnam", 1996
By The Hanoi Fine Arts Publishing House
Over a period of 30 years of peace from 1954
until 1984 - painting was a luxury. The concept, artists, was difficult
to reconcile within the working-class professions. Still, graduates from
Fine Art schools could find employment with some of the cultural bureaus
in the provinces - if they were not at too high expectation. They
received the same standard salary as any other official with a high
school or university degree. Monthly rations included food, allowances
for material (for clothing) and accommodation, though very basic. The
work performed by artists was simply as teaching elementary art classes
in school, producing drawing or decorating government offices. Since
offices generally did not require a lot of artistic work, they saw no
need in employing an artist on a full time basis. However, the number of
artists in Vietnam at that time was so small that the painting
profession was a respectable one.
The work is performed independently by artists, however, on the
occasion of national art exhibitions, the cultural offices would
materially support the participating artists in order to influence their
creativity, directing them towards themes like the revolutionary
struggle or the productive labor force. The organizing committee also
gave priority to paintings with such themes. As a result, two different
kinds of art emerged. Quite often one artist would practise both kinds
at the same time. The first kind was art works to be made for national
exhibitions or to please the committee. If lucky, one could win a prize
or sell a painting to the national art museum. The order was to paint
for one's own pleasure. Both painting and making sculptures required a
lot of expensive materials. While artists, with their small salary, had
to travel around the country or do research of cultural and historical
vestiges. As a result most artists were very poor. No artist even the
most renowned ones or the teachers at the arts academy, had his own
atelier. If one could get hold of some painting material it was to be
shared among a number of friends. Vietnamese artists, thus, became
generalists in the sense that depending on whatever material was
available at the time they painted in oil, on silk, used lacquer, water
colors or made wood prints - without being able to specialize in any
style or technique. Everything was available, yet not all the time and
in too small quantities.
There was a time lacquer painting lost their radiance for the lack of
materials to protect them from being cracked or lack of silver and gold
layers underneath the surface. Oil paintings ruined very quickly due to
the climate and a lack of high quality colors. The arts academy had to
concoct their own material by mixing local using line oil with water
colors then squeezed it into an empty tooth paste tubes. There was very
little painting material. And sometimes students had to trade their
share for food. The economic difficulties made influence on many spheres
of society. The artistic community fell apart. Some devoted themselves
completely to their creative endeavors; others looked towards different
ways to make a better living, mostly abandoning their artistic
profession all together. Quite a number of mediocre painters entered
into an official career. This had become a disaster for the development
of Vietnamese painting in general when talents are ignored and at the
same time state funds were allocated to the wrong places. In the 1980s
there were a lot of conflicts happened in between artists which in fact
created from the competition for distribution of fund. Many young
artists could not get their work exhibited. When the committee for young
artists was founded, three exhibitions; the first one in 1981, then 1985
and 1988; were organized, bringing to light new contradictions among the
young artists themselves. The committee failed to satisfy everyone's
expectations or to accommodate everyone's need.
Artists unlike writer, only cares about things around them where
they could get inspiration to work crazily for an art work, then finally
find the way to sell it. Study art at school is aside, most of artists
have to continue studying on their own. Young Vietnamese artists tend to
concentrate on essentialist or spiritual theories. Besides materialism,
they also study on Kant and Freud especially Buddhist texts and the "
Book of Changes" which is an important Confucian work in Eastern
philosophy. However the study could be said as haphazard and
unstructured. Given this situation, quite often an artists work is
influenced by the one publication on art he happens to own. There are
also tendencies to return to folklore since is the only direct cultural
source.
The lack of information and the village-like life-style have, in many
respects, brought artists to a quite close knit group. A number of
revered old teachers receive a constant stream of young visitors to
their homes. Sincere art artists are admired. Artists with similar
interests or from former class or former workmates get together to form
artist groups. Through this relationship, the artists complement and
learn from each other, even console each other after harsh criticism.
Many daughters of old artists gradually develop an interest in the
younger ones who visit their fathers and who might be famous one day,
too. Many get married in this way among the local community of artists
and the network of family relations among them becomes larger everyday.
Vietnam is unique in this respect since all the artists throughout the
country known each other as if they were living together in one village.
Every Vietnamese artist has experienced living in the countryside for a
period of life. They have been taught about traditional art of the
cultural vestiges like the village community house, temple and pagoda
from the first lessons, which will stay with them for the years to come.
However, this is almost contrary to what they will be taught on art in
college or the arts academy. In school, the most dominant teaching
methods, based on the Renaissance and Classic period, are long outdated.
Moreover, teaching material is chronically in short supply. In all the
art colleges sketching nudes is taboo. Inheriting from a richful
treasure of art from our ancients, the artists were still starving from
lack of knowledge. Western life styles with the modern art that
accompanies them floods into the schools seducing the students and made
influence on them. Students just consume all the different styles and
tendencies in the art without context or theoretical background.
Vietnamese are generally very strong on "emotions"; one could specify
further dash love, sympathy, sex, passion, and emotional bonds. These
factors are the inner life of Vietnamese paintings, although on the
outside they may have a borrowed
form.
In the 1990, before and after the passing of the policy Doi Moi
(renovation), an art market emerged. The price of one painting could be
sold equal or even two or three times as much as the monthly salary.
Artists began to neglect their official jobs, devoting themselves
entirely to painting. Up until 1994 numerous artists have asked to leave
their jobs at State offices, and now live entirely for their free
creative work or any art related job on the free market. Many students
no longer look for employment after graduation, some establish their own
design studios, others open galleries or workshops specializing in
painting on silk for ao dai, (the traditional dress still worn by
schoolgirls today). Even students from the provinces come to the city to
make a living.
The fine arts in Vietnam has developed to a point where it is difficult
to characterize as one distinct activity. In 1991 the Ministry of
Finance allocated a State funds of VN dong 50 million to the Vietnam
Fine Arts Association (about US$5.000), 205 million in 1992 (about
US$20.000), 287 million and 153 thousand in 1992 (about US$15.000) and
221 million and 4 hundred thousand in 1994 (about US22.000). At the same
time, an average gallery invests around US$30.000 every year in their
activities. All famous artists that is, those who sell many paintings,
are very well off. They have motor-bikes, own property, paint in
ateliers, play tennis, collect antiques, go traveling, generally
enjoying a good time... and even buy paintings of each other. Since art
has not yet been acknowledged as a way of making business, there is no
tax control on them. The museums continue collecting mediocre paintings
and sculptures. While all the best works still wait to be officially
recognized, they are continued to be sold abroad.
The individual relationships of artists with galleries and foreign art
organizations are much more extensive than those with the Fine Arts
Association. In 10 years (1980-1990), artists in this country have gone
from yearning for state subsidies in order to complete only one painting
to entirely spending their own money for painting, exhibiting, selling
and promoting their work. The professional association of artists plays
no more roles in their creative work. Painting has become the most
positive activity in the arts in general by taking full advantage of the
new opportunities under the renovation policy (Doi Moi) of the State.
Artists have generated their own capital without depending on the state
budget at all. The art market has good relation with foreign customers,
while attracting hard currency to the country. Last but not least, the
arts have made a strong contribution towards augmenting people's
knowledge after and beyond the war. |