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Vietnamese Art Scene -
Anthropologist's View
Distinguishing Distinctions: How to compare different sets of criteria
from Vietnam to France?
In what
way can we use anthropology to understand the various mechanisms within
the thoroughly specialised art worlds, where art historians,
politicians, sociologists and philosophers have ruled the ground for so
long? Is it possible for us to contribute in the understanding of such
an well-analysed institution? My answer is that our method of comparison
between different art worlds from different parts of the world can be a
source of new insight into the mechanisms that define the structure and
cultural contains of the specific art world one wants to analyse. Until
recently, anthropologists occupied with studying art have mostly
concentrated on the so-called ”primitive” art of the third or fourth
world. But the forthcoming of modern art also in these countries demands
a revision of the themes discussed, just as they can be valuable means
of comparison to our own study of the institution of modern or
contemporary art in our own part of the world.
In this
essay I will use Howard S. Becker’s definition of an ‘art world’:
“Art
worlds consist of all the people whose activities are necessary to the
production of the characteristic works which that world, and perhaps
others as well, define as art. Members of art worlds coordinate the
activities by which work is produced by referring to a body of
conventional understandings embodied in common practice and in
frequently used artifacts. The same people often cooperate repeatedly,
even routinely, in similar ways to produce similar works, so that we can
think of an art world as an established network of cooperative links
among participants.”[1]
Becker’s
conclusion is that the art world merely mirrors society at large, being
a kind of compressed society. One can therefore use an art world to
analyse some functions present in the society within which it exists.
The
“Distinction” as a book about judgment
In
Bourdieu’s Distinction, the readers are presented with a thorough
analysis, based on empirical examples from the French – or perhaps
basically Parisian - society, on the way judgments are based on social
positions as well as personal taste. He also manages to show that
personal taste is closely related to the social stratum to which one
belongs. People belonging to the higher social layers of society tend to
make fewer “errors” when judging cultural events, art, clothes,
furniture, books, music, etc., due to their upbringing and learned
behaviour. This learned set of criteria works as a frame for their
judgments, and one can detect a clear congruence in the answers given by
members of the same social stratum, when asked for instance about their
favourite music, artist, etc.
Another
thing Bourdieu found, was that art and culture was one of the categories
suitable for distinguishing between people and groups – and not just
economic capital, as we so often see. By calling the knowledge and skill
within cultural matters ‘cultural capital’, he also managed to create a
measurement for this “asset”. If one can be said to have a high cultural
capital, it implies that one has a good upbringing or a good education,
seen from the dominant group’s point of view, whereas if one is said to
have a high economic capital, but a low cultural capital, one could
easily be taken to be a part of the “nouveau riche” group. The settled
upper class or upper middle class often looks down upon this group. All
in all one can say that the whole system of distinctive judgments is
meant to categorise people, by showing to what social group each and
everyone belongs. These groups are of course not rigid and clear cut,
but are more or less abstract communities. It is also possible that
these distinctions are built up due to the increasing anonymity in the
large-scale societies in order to divide them into manageable sizes.
My
hypothesis is that Bourdieu’s theory of the Distinction craves an
established and resourceful society, though it necessarily has to be a
class-divided one, in order to work. In a society undergoing rapid
economic and social changes one will therefore not find the same
patterns or distinction lines between different social groups. This is
caused by the social mobility possible in such societies, paired with
the fluctuation in power relations such changes bring along. I will
explain this by using empirical examples from the Hanoian art world.
Social
evolution in Vietnam during the 20th century
For
readers who have knowledge about the various revolutions in China, and
the Cultural Revolution especially, it is easy to grasp the changes that
took place in Vietnam after the communists reunited the country in 1975.
Vietnam has always taken on the role as China’s little brother,
repeating after them in their own way. When Chairman Mao launched the
Cultural Revolution, leading to the persecution of nearly all
intellectual capacities in the republic, Vietnam launched a similar one,
only a little less aggressive. The same thing happened when China in the
mid-eighties decided to open up to more foreign trade, giving some
economic reforms. Vietnam, in 1986, stated to change in the same
direction, launching the doi moi, or ”open door”, policy of renovation.
Since the leader of the communist forces, Ho Chi Minh, won the war
against the Americans, bringing a socialist regime to the country, the
doi moi has been the single most extensive reform in Vietnam this
century. It opened the door to private investment and ownership, giving
individuals the right to start a business and keep most of the outcome.
It started slowly and without much trouble, and has ended in an
explosion of private owned shops, factories, agrarian industry etc. Rice
production more than doubled, and in Hanoi today there are thousands of
shops, where you twenty years ago only had a few state owned stores. The
pace of economic growth still seems relatively stable.
Before
the doi moi reform, one was only allowed to buy necessary items using
ration tickets. This made distribution fairly equal among people, if you
ignore the corruption and crime that took place. But it made it
difficult for people to obtain things of distinguishing quality. There
was no true upper class, and the dominant group was made up by the top
party members. And when one considers the anti-intellectual movement in
the late seventies, one can easily see that there was little ”cultural
capital” among the leaders. The potential cultural capital was at least
thoroughly hidden, even though some forms of ”high culture” were
allowed. Visits at the opera house or the theatre, for instance, were
something most people could afford in the city, but were scarcely used
by the broad group of people.
The
result today is that hardly any Vietnamese ever visit art galleries,
make use of theatres, operas and other high culture offers. The
exceptions are the people who are themselves involved in businesses
related to these areas. And apart from a handful of art collectors,
people do not buy art whenever they have money to spend. An
anthropologist who has lived in Vietnam for about thirty years estimates
that only three percent of the art sold in Vietnam is bought by
Vietnamese. In other words, the distinctions between the different
social groups do not at all follow the same demarcation lines that they
do in for instance the French society.
Art
objects and the judgment of taste
Fine art
fills many functions in our own society. An art object can be an
investment, obtained by someone who wants to signalise taste and
knowledge about art, or someone who anticipates the art piece to rise in
monetary value. It can be an object meant to criticise, awaken or
disturb people’s attitudes to society itself, or it can be a romantic
portrait of a beloved country. It may not necessarily be meant for sale,
and in many cases nobody wants to own it, but simply to look at it for a
while. Still, art has become a marker for social distinctions, in that
one needs a certain knowledge and a trained eye in order to distinguish
between good and bad art. It is the dominant class’ privilege to set
these distinctions, Bourdieu states, as it is to be able to condemn the
taste of groups who lack the same notions of taste. People from lower
social strata often complain about not being able to “understand” modern
art, for instance, thereby indirectly accepting the norms set by the
dominant group. What they often mean, said in other words, is that they
don’t like modern art, but that they know that they are supposed to like
it. The result is a feeling of distance and (fremmedgjøring) when faced
with these art forms, whereas they are fully able to appreciate the art
the dominant group finds “vulgar” or “shallow”.
In
Vietnam one of the noticeable things is that there are hardly any
Vietnamese people visiting the various galleries. Those who go to
openings are basically art dealers, artists or friends and family of the
artists exhibiting there. The average Vietnamese have probably never
set foot in a gallery. Does this mean that they deprive themselves of
all art experience? Not necessarily. The pagodas and temples are richly
decorated with art of many different categories. Not exactly modern art,
but often quite experimental. According to a more strict definition on
art, these art pieces would perhaps end up being labeled ‘artifacts’,
due to their function as religious ornaments. But they do have meanings
comparable to many of our own society’s biggest cultural treasures,
which also happen to be paintings made within a religious setting.
Aesthetics and spirituality are combined so as to give people a sense of
the sacred, and looking at them can bring a rich and mighty art
experience. This is both because of the high technical skill needed to
make them, and the imaginativeness they represent.
But this
art belongs to the public sphere, or semi-public, if you like. All
Buddhists as well as non-Buddhists are allowed to enter any pagoda, but
if one belongs to another belief, one would perhaps not feel easy about
going to such a place. Anyhow, most people could have their appetite for
aesthetics filled via the regular, often daily, visits to the local
pagoda. And at festivals and special occasions it is common to travel a
little further to visit some famous pagoda outside the neighbourhood.[2]
Through
the symbolism utilised in the art works in the pagodas and temples,
people obtain a certain ”symbol-language”. This means that they draw
information from what they see - information that is hidden from people
coming from outside the Buddhist community. Take myself, for instance, I
could not grasp the meaning of the different colours used. Red, to me,
means fear, strong aggressive emotions, or passion, whereas it’s the
colour of luck and happiness for the Vietnamese. While white, which is
the colour of innocence and light emotions in the West, is the colour of
death in Vietnam. Cerise, a strong red/pink/purple colour, is hardly
ever used in large amounts at one place in our society, and if it were,
one would sense a touch of madness or chaotic emotions. In Vietnam, it
is used to dye rice paper, and this paper is sacrificed to obtain more
luck. The pagodas are filled with objects in this colour, and this again
adds to people’s perception of the pagoda as a happy place.
The
community becomes a useful term in this analysis. For in ”normal”
Vietnamese homes there are few objects meant for decoration only apart
from the family shrines. Some may have a poster of a Dutch tulip garden,
or a lacquer board with traditional motives on one of the walls, but
rarely more than that. Most events take place outside the home, so that
it is not ordinary practice to invite foreigners to one’s house. The
nearest neighbourhood, the local pagoda or the work places are places
where people interact, and this is where both loose and close contacts
are made. If a person wants to ”show off”, he better do it on the street
or at work. That’s where people who know you would notice. And the most
common object obtained to show off, is the motorbike. For the average
person, the Honda Dream II is the prime object of desire. But some have
gone beyond this to mark their success. Everyone knows the market value
of a Honda Dream II, some 2800 USD. And surprisingly many have managed
to buy one. For most people in the city, this means borrowing money from
friends and family, and paying back over a few years. For an average
person, on an average Vietnamese salary (some 40 USD a month), it would
hardly ever be possible to save enough money to buy it cash. And there
is a lot of black market involvement in these transactions. But for
those few who make up what is settling as a new upper class, a price
like this is a small amount. They buy far more expensive vehicles, like
Suzuki scooters, Honda motorcycles, etc. – vehicles worth twice the
price or more.
But they
do not buy art. It would be impossible to show off an art object unless
one owns a gallery or runs a big company where lots of people come by.
Besides, the modern art tradition is so young in Hanoi that few have
enough cultural capital to distinguish between art pieces of high and
low quality. Allusions to art and artists are not common in their
language, and media focus on art have only been directed towards those
artists who have been faithful to the regime and made paintings and
sculptures of the right spirit. The religious decorations and art pieces
in the pagodas and temples are never signed by the artist himself, and
so one is not trained in noticing the connection between an art piece
and the artist. Besides, the shrines and decorations in the pagodas are
very often made by more than one person and often by a master and his
trainees. Some may know who has made what shortly after, but some
generations later it will be forgotten. In addition to this, the fact
that these works belongs to the religious, and not the economic sphere.
They may be donations or sacrifices to the giver’s ancestors, or they
may be purchased by the religious community after saving up other
monetary donations. The art pieces that people see most often are
therefore not usually estimated after their economic value.
When
saying that art is not yet used as a distinction does not mean it never
will be. After fifteen years of rather free trade with the West, and
presence of Western tourists, aid program workers, diplomats and
businessmen in Hanoi, the growing new bourgeoisie has adapted some of
the life style of the foreigners. Besides, it gets more and more obvious
that art could be a good investment for the future as the foreigners
spend quite a lot of their money in art galleries. But one must not
forget that the last famine is only about fifteen years back in the
past, when unofficial figures say that about a million people starved to
death. So investment for the future is still rather careful and
pragmatic. Though one artist in whose atelier/work shop studio I spent
some time, had started collecting antique lacquer ornaments from
pagodas, along with antique water puppets. The water puppets has since
the start of foreign tourism to Vietnam been a favourite collecting
object for tourists. They are mainly sold as puppets gone out of use,
but have in fact mainly not been in use at all, and have been added a
fake patina and a large amount of dust in order to look old and worn
out. The artist acquaintance of mine, on the other hand, has extensive
knowledge in lacquer, and can more easily see what is original or not.
Still, rumours make it that he has also lost face after investing in
quite a big amount of antiques that turned out to be fakes.
Another
case is that the former intellectual elite now has free hands, almost,
in picking up their ancient family traditions. Among my own informants,
there were many from well educated families, some seeming almost a bit
upper class – not counting in income but in cultural capital. This
implies that the hierarchy is once again rising, giving a new set of
potential distinctions. Knowledge in Western authors and thinkers was
one thing that some of my informants underscored in describing what
their parents had always appreciated. The access to such literature has
for some decades been scarce, but not absent. The black market has kept
a certain distribution going.
There is
one more issue related to the explanation of why art is less used as a
social distinction in Vietnam than in the West. And this is the
relatively new connection between an artwork and its maker. Since the
end of the middle ages European art has become more and more focused on
the person behind the art works. Schooling and training in art has given
a part of society extensive knowledge in art history and art theory, as
well as making a demarcation between the autodidact and the educated.
The signature, often the mark of quality or originality, has become
almost unavoidable in order to sell an art piece. But there is not
necessarily a connection between the signature and the appreciation of
an art piece. Most people would agree when asked if they can have a rich
and mighty art experience without being aware of who the artist behind
the art piece is. But in a time when focus on authenticity, originality
and labels has become so apparent, the artwork’s autonomy has perhaps
decreased, as one is just as interested in its creator as in the piece
per se. It is still necessary for me to underline that this is not the
case with those who are interested in art for the sake of the art
expression only, but most with those who are interested in art as an
investment or as a symbol of a higher status.
In
Vietnam, the focus on the signature on art works has come only recently.
One does not have to look
back many years to find that artists who are now famous didn’t
bother to keep record of their works, and often didn’t even sign their
works. This has led to a situation where reproductions and plagiats are
abundant on the market, undermining the value of the original pieces.
The American anthropologist Nora A. Taylor describes this in her article
on one of the artists, Phai, who became famous after his death. His
widow had not kept record of her husband’s works, and since he all his
life was very generous in donating paintings to friends and one
particular cafe owner, she could not say which paintings now abundant in
the various galleries that actually was made by Phai.
In order
to see why the theory of the distinction in terms of art is not
applicable to the Vietnamese social division, we have found that the
connection between an artist and his works is an important weakness. But
why is this connection so important?
The
sleeping bourgeoisie
After a
century of colonialism, much of the upper class had become more oriented
towards France than against China, who had always been the major source
of spiritual and cultural inspiration. There was still a lot of
resistance against what many schooled mandarins looked upon as decadent
Western influence, but many gained on the French presence. Ho Chi Minh,
like his Marxist companions in many other countries before him, saw the
bourgeoisie as a threat to the new order. The former mandarins and
bourgeoisie were deprived of their property, an effective means of
ensuring that they lost their previous influence. Attempts at criticisms
were held down by various sanctions. It didn’t matter whether one had
been on the communist side before the revolution, and so even many
communist thinkers were in fact sent to re-education camps. These camps
were meant to turn opponents of the new regime to good citizens, but
have been described as mere working camps, where people could be kept
from a few years and up till fifteen years. Coming back from these camps
can be seen as a punishment in itself, in that nobody wanted or dared to
be associated with such social misfits. Many of them work as peddlers or
cyclo-drivers today, not having been able to find employment anywhere.
The party
has been in control of most institutions. In order to seek employment,
you need a registration card, and if you have done something unapproved
of, this could be a large obstacle. Enrolment in all higher schools and
universities demand a good personal record, and some of my informants
have described the selection of students for the Art College as unfair
and slightly corrupt. Skills matter little if someone with a better
background than you applies.
Until the
beginning of the nineties, the police in charge of each street saw to it
that all people stayed at their own house, unless they had delivered a
detailed report on their whereabouts. If someone wanted to spend the
night at a friend’s house, he or she had to report to the police the
name and address of the friend, and for how long one intended to stay
there. After the curfew, one was supposed to stay indoors. In this way,
the police could keep record of all people’s movements, and could pay
special attention to suspect persons.
All these
regulations are to a certain degree prevalent even today, when
everything else has loosened more up. My artist informants seem well
aware of the fact that they are, or may well be, kept under supervision.
And whereas many artists in the West complain about the restrictions put
on their work by the demanding market, artists of Vietnam complain about
the too strict rules – written or unwritten. But more important, the
system has put an end to the workings of the former bourgeoisie. For
forty years they have not been able to keep up their habits and way of
life. All Western books were confiscated and burnt, apart from a few
well-hidden ones. Poetry, literature, song, dance, music, art and
official events were under strict supervision, if not simply banned.
Neighbours complained as soon as they discovered tendencies of
bourgeoisie behaviour, and a new upper class, the one of party
officials, became apparent. Material goods were not necessarily a part
of this new group’s benefits, but freedom of movement and political
power. Or, one might say, influence and control. Suddenly
intellectualism and high cultural capital were not in centre for the
dominant group. A completely new set of deeds was applied. In order to
rule one had to command these new ”virtues”. And as time went, these
party-ethics were taught to the children of the higher officials as
well, keeping the tradition going. Non-intellectualism, in our Western
sense of the word, has therefore become an apparent part of the dominant
class, or group.
Art ended
in a mid-position in all this. When used correctly, it was considered a
good means of educating the people in the socialist spirit. Artist who
were judged as good portraitist, as well as being good citizens, were
allowed to paint portraits of Uncle Ho. Together with the flag, Ho Chi
Minh’s face was a national symbol held sacred to everyone, and fear of
misuse pushed forward the ban on ”unauthorised” usage. All art that
served the ”cause” were promoted and supported, but at the same time
everyone who made art for other means were suspected of being
bourgeoisie. Nora A. Taylor writes about a now famous Hanoian painter,
Bui Xuan Phai, who were held outside the official art life because most
of his paintings depicted empty, grey street motives. The paintings are
now seen as picturesque and nostalgic to the pre-capitalist era, but
were at that time viewed as reactionary and bourgeoisie. Party members
suspected the artist of wanting to show to the people that the grey and
melancholic streets were the results of a failing socialist economy.
Socialist art should be colourful and motivating, or at least educating.
This does
not mean that all art produced before the policy of renovation was
socialist or ”state art”. It only meant that there were fewer sources of
income for those who decided to make more autonomous art. Since people
didn’t have money to buy art, the art collections we find among
Vietnamese today, basically began from gifts given to them by artist
friends or colleagues, or art given as payment. A good example of the
latter is the cafe owner of Cafe Lam, who received many paintings from
poor painters as payment for coffee and other drinks. Today he has the
largest collections of original paintings of Bui Xuan Phai. This is an
important contribution to keeping art within the country, taken into
consideration that approximately 97% of the art buyers in Vietnam are
foreigners.
We have
now seen that the former bourgeoisie of Vietnam has more or less
disappeared, and that a political elite of party members has replaced
the dominant group. These are not necessarily former people of means,
and mostly they have been at the right place at the right time. One can
say that they represent a suddenly social and political mobility, where
the cards where dealt differently from the former regimes. What is
certain, is that none of the new leaders had been known to have colonial
sympathies before the revolution. In the new Republic of Vietnam they
became more and more a petit bourgeoisie, in that they, in stark
contrast to the rest of the people, had access to some material goods as
well as decision power. Bourdieu writes that the differences between the
bourgeoisie and the petit bourgeoisie lie in the cultural capital,
rather than the economic capital. Whereas the former has inherited
knowledge and taste in high culture, art, interior decoration, etc. from
their parents, the latter has little such knowledge. The result is that
they find their own way about things, often in a way the dominant group
finds tasteless or comical.
Time
is a precious thing
This may
be the case with the new petit bourgeoisie growing from the political
elite as well. They were the ones who were allowed to define what was
acceptable culture and what was not. But instead of showing off their
new wealth (compared to the rest of the population), they stuck to the
ascetic ideal created by, or after, Ho Chi Minh – at least publicly.
After the
doi moi, the cards have been dealt again, and the petit bourgeoisie we
now see racing on fancy motorbikes and hidden behind dark car windows,
have a far more conspicuous consumption. They fulfill the petit
bourgeoisie stereotype set up by Bourdieu quite well. Being seen in the
right restaurants and cafes is essential, and so is dressing in clothes
with large labels. There is little modesty in their life styles, and if
one tries to localise their particular ”culture”, it would be more the
American one than a conservative, value laden Vietnamese one. But there
is one crucial aspect that still separates the petit bourgeoisie in
Hanoi from the ones we find in other countries: leisure time. Jukka
Gronow[3] writes about this as a visible indication on wealth.
Refraining from work is a conventional sign of high social status. This
has traditionally been seen among those who could afford to have an
“idle wife”. Taken up by the petit bourgeoisie, this has lead to the
creation of “the housewife” as a social virtue. But just staying at home
was never enough. One had to keep servants in order to achieve a higher
social position. Gronow uses Veblen’s theories on this, calling the
various forms of chosen idleness “conspicuous leisure”[4]. In leisure no
work is done, and therefore nothing is produced. One is doing an
activity for another purpose than making money; e.g. one receives money
from elsewhere. The leisure should ideally be concentrated on aesthetic
activities, so that one can communicate a refined taste. Art, etiquette,
sport of certain kinds – especially the vastly time-consuming ones as
golf – or theatre visits may do.
But one
problem is that our societies have become so anonymous that it’s
difficult to notice leisure. Therefore leisure activities are often
sporadic and short-lived, taken over by conspicuous consumption, Veblen
states. But what one often find, is that sports activities that at the
same time function as conspicuous leisure and conspicuous consumption,
such as speed boats, sailing, horse racing, golfing (in the “right”
clubs, that is), etc, have become very popular among the higher social
layers.
In
Vietnam, on the other hand, very few can be found doing nothing unless
they are out of work. Being idle is definitely no Confucianist virtue.
As far as I could see, the leisure activities that took place in Hanoi
were based in the evenings, and were often combined with consumption of
expensive German or Danish beer, racing on fast motorbikes for the
younger generation and being seen dining out on the right places. Going
on holidays seemed very rare, but were beginning to become more popular
among the city dwellers with a high income. But things are obviously
changing quickly, as foreign investments have found their ways into the
pockets of the most inventive Hanoians. Still, visiting galleries, as I
have mentioned, has not become a “conspicuous” leisure activity. This
may be because no one is doing it apart from foreigners, and because it
has never been a part of the upper class activities.
Who
defines the ”high layer” of Vietnamese art?
Is it the
people of means within Vietnam, or do we need to look further to find
the answer? The answer gives itself. Since foreigners of some kind buy
about 97% percent of the art bought in Vietnam, it would necessarily
have to be those same buyers who set the market. But in order to be able
to decide on what is being produced and sold within the Hanoian Art
World, for instance, those buyers would have to have a very powerful
influence on the producers. In Hanoi there are a couple of thousand
artists, or people producing art of one kind or another. Out of these
there is a majority who produce what the market demands, by seeing what
other artists have been successful with, or by trying different
variants. These often revert to what we would probably call “tourist
art” or (even worse) “ethno kitsch”. But there is a strong influence on
the market by more autonomous artists, artists who have found, or are
looking for, an expression of their own. They may have more success in
receiving good critics and attention from galleries and curators from
abroad and within the country than actually selling, but they still
become idols or receive respect and admiration from colleagues who
themselves are drawn between autonomy and market dependency.
But does
the market necessarily have to ruin good art? Do we have a too
pessimistic view on market influence on art? Tyler Cowen writes about
the European art history as one that has created many great talents
through letting the market or patrons decide what is being produced. He
reminds us that Michelangelo, Rembrandt and other artists now considered
geniuses, all depended on orders and missions from patrons. In Cowen’s
opinion this didn’t have a bad effect on their works. But let us look
more closely on the art market of Hanoi, in order to see what is at work
there.
Who
are the art consumers of Hanoi?
Many of
the art buyers in Vietnam are diplomats, NGO-workers, NGOs, foreign
institutions of both commercial and non-commercial bases, employees of
various international or transnational companies and tourists. But it’s
the foreign collectors and art galleries who make up the most
influential fraction. Those are the ones who are willing to put large
sums into it, and when buying art they seem to be thinking that ”if we
are buying a large piece of art and shipping it home anyway, we might as
well fill up a whole container”. I was myself present at a lacquer
studio where three French art dealers bought three or four lacquer
paintings measuring almost one square meter each. With thick hand carved
and gold leafed frames, the price was high even in European measures.
And throughout the nearly two months I frequented the studio, large
lacquer panels were painted and carried out or stacked in wooden boxes
and shipped out of the country regularly. The master of these paintings
had eleven trainees, either learning the wood carving and lacquer
preparation occupations, or learning lacquer painting by actually making
most of the master’s works. Lacquer painting, both when painting
abstracts and naturalistically figurative, is an even more time
consuming task than Rembrandt’s portrait work, and is therefore often
produced in teams.
The other
fraction, the tourist art or ethno kitsch, as it has been labeled by
Nelson Graburn[5] and others after him, is made especially for the
tourist market. Whereas Graburn is more occupied with fourth world
societies, we can easily find the same development in nearly all
countries where tourism is an important part of the GNP. What is
characteristic about this production, is that it is very clever at
analysing what the travelers are looking for. In the beginning the
producers noticed a search for antique, ethnic and traditional products.
The newcomers could be seen bargaining with an old grandmother over a
hand crafted rice basket, or a hand woven, worn out silk table cloth.
But it didn’t take long before these items were either sold already, or
had been reproduced and put up for sale. As soon as the Vietnamese
understood the value of a traditional silk painting, they of course
started either making or commissioning such items. But the expanding new
market didn’t lead to reproductions only. Art dealers noticed that the
items didn’t have to be exactly according to the tradition. In fact,
since the tourists often have only limited knowledge about the material
cultures of the countries that they visit, there was an equally good
market for other “ethnic” products. Graburn has written an article on
this subject with the telling title “I like things to look more
different than that stuff did”[6].
What does
this imply to the Vietnamese art market? Firstly, it means that the
dominant influence on art production has its roots outside the country.
Secondly, it implies that the cultural capital within Vietnam has little
influence on the direction the market takes. In order to build up
cultural capital for use in ones own society, to enable cultural
dominance, one need to control at least part of the network – be it the
production, the distribution or the consumption. The way things are
today; the foreign ”agents” decides what art it is wise to make in order
to be able to exhibit in renowned art galleries and museums the world
over – and inside Vietnam. In addition they also decide what art sells
best, though it differs a lot between the various layers of art buyers.
Whereas foreign gallerists, collectors and curators look for something
innovative and daring, diplomats buy what’s considered expensive and a
good investment by their advisors (this can be both art critics in
newspapers, magazines, books or people they trust), whereas tourists buy
what would match Nelson Graburn’s ”ethno kitsch”.
A
discussion on the various influences on art will necessarily involve
certain aspects of aesthetics and taste. What is considered good art, or
at least buyable art, will theoretically vary from group to group.
Whereas curators seems to have their own criteria for what’s good art,
judged on basis of a choosy audience with a liking for avant guard art,
collectors seem to consider the ”authentic”, ever lasting, and
technically advanced as the best buys. For tourists, the basic thing is
price and whether it is being representative. In the ”tourist galleries”
of Hanoi, one can see bright colours, naïvist shapes and low prices. The
qualities of the works are usually good, but often give a notion of
serial production and rationality in time consumption. The tourists in
Hanoi, like tourists so many other places, tend to look for the exotic
and place-specific. As Graburn describes it, they look for something
that can tell other people something about themselves. If they place
such a painting in their living rooms, they will automatically
communicate something about their encounters with exotic cultures, as
well as the appreciation of hand made objects rather than mass-produced
ones[7]. Chinese style lacquer paintings or silk paintings have
therefore a very stable market share. In order to find the most
“authentic” Vietnamese expressions they choose a style that was
prevalent long before the French Colonial period. Another group of
tourists choose paintings that look like European or Western, like
French expressionism, Romanticism, Modernism or Post-Modernism. Having
talked to only a few of those customers, I got the impression that it
was the opportunity to be able to buy an oil painting, something they
could not afford at home, that counted the most to them. The obtaining
of an art object could give them the pleasure of admiring art in their
own home, and not only at galleries or museums. Some of them apologised
for not having much knowledge about art, but explained their choice as
solely a matter of personal taste.
This
gives us the following picture: In Hanoi there’s a market for the avant
guard, both the paintings influenced by Western art trends, and the ones
that have roots basically within the Eastern symbol world. These are
bought by art specialists of some sort, either professional art
collectors or dealers, or by people with certain knowledge in art
stationed in the South East of Asia. In the other end of the continuum,
there’s a market for the conservative tradition-based expressions,
paintings that are essentially of a high technical and stable value. In
between those, there is a broad market for reproductions, paintings
strongly influenced by either one, but not quite as good and
unproblematic, the so-called ”nice” art[8]. Beautiful colours, simple,
clean shapes and a conscientious composition, mixed with a lower price
makes sure that the distribution stays rather stable.
Conclusion
We have
seen that despite the fact that Vietnam has been under French influence
for more than a century, there is little in their social stratification
that may resemble the French social situation of today. There are new
tendencies towards an easy going, nouveau riche social stratum, but
these have largely adapted to the American satellite-TV-culture instead
of the petit-bourgeoisie culture of the more settled and conservative
societies in the West.
[1] Becker, H.S. (1982) pp.34-35
[2] One of my informants told me that one particular pagoda had
always made a strong impression on her. It was near the West
Lake, north of central Hanoi. Even if it didn’t take long to get
there from her house, it was a place the family only visited
once a year, or some years not at all.
[7] Graburn, Nelson (1976b:2)
[8] This was a label many of my informants used in order to
distinguish between themselves and those of their colleagues who
had a less “avant guard” style or attitude to their work.
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