The search for the meaning of life has been man’s eternal quest since the beginning of time. Finnish artist Maritta Nurmi has long been pondering this quintessential question of how to live life mindfully.
Exhibition, Past Exhibitions
Bold Strokes – Celebration of Life and ArtCatherine Karnow, Dang Anh Viet, David Thomas, Diep Quy Hai, Dinh Cong Dat, Dinh Thi Tham Poong, Dinh Y Nhi, Ha Tri Hieu, Jorge Rivera, Le Quoc Viet, Le Thua Tien, Lolo Zazar, Maritta Nurmi, Nguyen Cam, Nguyen Duc Dung, Nguyen Manh Hung, Nguyen Minh Thanh, Nguyen Nghia Cuong, Nguyen Quang Thang, Nguyen The Son, Nguyen Thi Chau Giang, Nguyen Thi Chinh Le, Pham Van Tuan, Phan Cam Thuong, Phi Phi Oanh, Sébastien Laval, Simon Redington, Tran Hoang Son, Tran Trong Duong, Truong Tan, and Vu Kim Thu
May 11 - May 31, 2016
Art Vietnam Gallery, 24 Ly Quoc Su Hanoi, Vietnam
ExhibitionPast Exhibitions
A Group Exhibition by Catherine Karnow, Dang Anh Viet, David Thomas, Diep Quy Hai, Dinh Cong Dat, Dinh Thi Tham Poong, Dinh Y Nhi, Ha Tri Hieu, Jorge Rivera, Le Quoc Viet, Le Thua Tien, Lolo Zazar, Maritta Nurmi, Nguyen Cam, Nguyen Duc Dung, Nguyen Manh Hung, Nguyen Minh Thanh, Nguyen Nghia Cuong, Nguyen Quang…
Catherine Karnow, Dang Anh Viet, David Thomas, Diep Quy Hai, Dinh Cong Dat, Dinh Thi Tham Poong, Dinh Y Nhi, Ha Tri Hieu, Jorge Rivera, Le Quoc Viet, Le Thua Tien, Lolo Zazar, Maritta Nurmi, Nguyen Cam, Nguyen Duc Dung, Nguyen Manh Hung, Nguyen Minh Thanh, Nguyen Nghia Cuong, Nguyen Quang Thang, Nguyen The Son, Nguyen Thi Chau Giang, Nguyen Thi Chinh Le, Pham Van Tuan, Phan Cam Thuong, Phi Phi Oanh, Sébastien Laval, Simon Redington, Tran Hoang Son, Tran Trong Duong, Truong Tan, and Vu Kim Thu
May 11 - May 31, 2016
Art Vietnam Gallery, 24 Ly Quoc Su Hanoi, Vietnam
A Group Exhibition by Catherine Karnow, Dang Anh Viet, David Thomas, Diep Quy Hai, Dinh Cong Dat, Dinh Thi Tham Poong, Dinh Y Nhi, Ha Tri Hieu, Jorge Rivera, Le Quoc Viet, Le Thua Tien, Lolo Zazar, Maritta Nurmi, Nguyen Cam, Nguyen Duc Dung, Nguyen Manh Hung, Nguyen Minh Thanh, Nguyen Nghia Cuong, Nguyen Quang…
Art must have content, yet the content is not always pictorial. The ideal of color, of visual form, of composition, must be expressed in art through non-pictorial means. Only then does the artist begin to observe the particular, the psychological object, and discover its meaning, its implications, its unformed shape. All of these things must…
Elizabeth Rush, Exhibition, Past Exhibitions
Still Lifes From a Vanishing CityApr. 15, 2016
Art Vietnam Gallery 24 Ly Quoc Su Hanoi, Vietnam
Elizabeth RushExhibitionPast Exhibitions
A Solo Exhibition by Elizabeth Rush
Apr. 15, 2016
Art Vietnam Gallery 24 Ly Quoc Su Hanoi, Vietnam
A Solo Exhibition by Elizabeth Rush
Tham Poong is now drifting into the fanciful floating world of love and human connection. Well known for her personal narratives on the life of the ethnic minorities, the world of her origin, the artist is now exploring life beyond.
Four Seasons and tam cuc (a kind of playing card), pieces of gold lacquered sculpture and mat. Chinh Le has used traditional motifs and techniques in a new way. The language is simple, she does not abuse the alluring beauty of gold and silver or a hackneyed vision.
Playing with life, playing with paper, fun loving artist Nguyen Nghia Cuong portrays life at its fullest, richest, poorest, happiest, saddest. The ful range of human expression spills forth with abandon from brush to paper. Some works merely depict the simple joys of life… others evoke a wrenching, painful sadness that no sunshine can exorcise.
Sometimes, while wandering in a garden we incidentally pluck some leaves. On other occasions, we sit staring abstractly into the rice-fields, mounts and rivers or looking fixedly on stars during sleepless nights. We see and do not know what we see, we go and do not know where to go.
Compelled to express this struggle of reconciliation with his past, Cam spent many years processing these emotions, utilizing raw materials flung onto the canvas with an abandon and urgency no border could contain. Gradually he began to reach the eye of the storm.
Dinh Y Nhis uniquely singular works of twisted, anguished stick figures, starkly painted in black and white gouache on paper were possessed with a hungry, primitive energy that palpably demanded a visceral reaction from the viewer.










