The Story of Han Nom PDF for more
Transcription
The Story of Han Nom PDF for more
THE HAN NOM STORY ADocumentaryFilmProposal PO BOX 736, south freeport, me 04078 www.pernacontent.com DOCUMENTARY FILM Perna Content is currently seeking to raise an additional $41000 USD to continue to produce, edit and distribute a documentary film about one of Vietnam's most important artists and scholars who are influenced by Han Nom. Initial production has already begun with filming in Hanoi and Boston but there is still much more to be done. PO BOX 736, south freeport, me 04078 www.pernacontent.com 2 “My work explores the presence and role of Vietnam’s ancient and recent history within its current culture. Often combining ancient and traditional calligraphic forms with sculptural installation, I seek to investigate and uncover Vietnam’s contemporary society’s interaction with its past traditions. For more than 1,000 years Chinese calligraphy was the dominant form of writing used in Vietnam. In the 11th century the Vietnamese people also adopted our own script known as Nom. For centuries the Vietnamese people could read and write both the Han Chinese characters and the Nom Vietnamese characters. Chinese people could not generally read Nom- it was only for Vietnamese people. With the advent of French domination of our culture for 80 years, Vietnam converted to its current phonetic form of western writing. Except for scholars, Vietnamese people no longer are able to read either Chinese characters or Nom. I use both of these scripts in my work to talk about the loss of this aspect of Vietnamese culture. Through various installation devices I incorporate sound and movement to relate to other aspects of written communication and language.” Le Quoc Viet PO BOX 736, south freeport, me 04078 www.pernacontent.com WHY A FILM ABOUT AN ANCIENT VIETNAMESE WRITING SYSTEM? “ In Viet's paintings one encounters calligraphy, Chinese ink drawings and paper rubbings of stone reliefs taken from aging pagodas. These purely black and white representations are often highlighted by colorful print details. The wood blocks Viet uses are hand made and one can also trace their origins to the pagodas that dot the Vietnamese countryside. Each vibrant print lends a richly detailed and edgy touch to Viet's paintings, creating a visual language that is irreducibly traditional and modern. These works are the product of a complicated and uneasy soul. They represent a man who has one foot firmly planted in age-old Buddhist practices while the other is searching for traction amongst the rapid waves of change that characterize modernity.” Pham Cam Thuong PO BOX 736, south freeport, me 04078 www.pernacontent.com THE BRIEF STORY OF PHAN CAM THONG, LE QUOC VIET AND THE ZENEI GROUP? Le Quoc Viet was born in 1972 in Thanh Hoa province, one of the poorest regions in Vietnam. When he was seven he was sent to the Long Cam Pagoda where he studied for 10 years learning Zen Buddhism, Chinese, Sanskrit, and teaching himself to draw from the illustrations in the Buddhist texts. When he was 17 he traveled to Chua Huong (Perfume Pagoda) to continue his studies and to become a Buddhist monk. At Chua Huong he met the Venerable Thich Vien Thanh who told Viet that he had too much “fire in his belly”, that he was bright, ambitious and a talented artist and encouraged Viet to study art rather than become a Zen Buddhist monk. Following Thich Vien Thanh’s advice, Le Quoc Viet has gone on to become one of Vietnam’s most important artists. Viet is now a leading Buddhist, Chinese and Nom scholar and the foremost calligrapher in Vietnam. Le Quoc Viet is one of only 150 Vietnamese scholars who can read and write in Nom, the ancient Vietnamese language. In 2000, after 10 years of research, Viet with scholars Phan Cam Thuong and Cung Khac Luoc, published Ancient Graphics of Vietnam, an extensive and valuable body of work about the ancient graphics of Vietnam covering the entire country. Le Quoc Viet creates a striking and powerful image with his black lacquered teeth. In the past many Vietnamese believed that only savages, wild animals and demons had white teeth. The blackening of one’s teeth was often done to assure one would not be mistaken for an evil spirit, but when the French came to Vietnam, they did not understand the implied beauty and black lacquered teeth was discouraged. In the countryside one still sees the occasional lacquered teeth and not infrequently you might still encounter it in the pagodas with the senior monks, but it is hardly a contemporary fashion. By lacquering his teeth Viet has made a personal statement that harkens back to his life in pagodas. Le Quoc Viet is now researching the lives of 17th century monks from the ancient pagodas of North Vietnam, the development of Zen Buddhism and its impact on society. PO BOX 736, south freeport, me 04078 www.pernacontent.com SYNOPSIS – WHAT IS THIS FILM ABOUT? Simply said this film is about Han Nom, Buddhist scholars and the art. Using Viet’s art, story and narrative we explore Vietnam’s culture, heritage, customs, and the social impact of being modern in a rapidly changing world. The arc and narrative of this film is as follows: We will follow the thread and narrative of Viet’s life as an artist and a scholar , beginning with his upbringing by monks in the Long Cam pagoda. We examine what drives this artist, what impact he has. We will follow Viet’s path and quest as he travels throughout Vietnam for knowledge about the life and teachings of the monks in the pagodas of North Vietnam during the 17th century and the development of Zen Buddhism. In the foreground we follow Le Quoc Viet’s rich, fantastical life and his search. In the background, our film explores the historical and cultural issues that face a rapidly changing Vietnam. We’ll meet the myriad of people in his life, people who love, revere, hate and, at times, are jealous of Viet; old lovers, children, monks, and fellow artists. We’ll speak with Le Quoc Viet private art collectors and museums around the world. We will learn why Viet is considered so unique. We will see him work, create, interact with musicians, poets, government officials, the Goethe Institute, teachers, college professors and critics; supporters and detractors alike. There will be warts; there will be tension, friction, frustration, discord and there will be inspiration, discovery and beauty. We will explore the conflicts of modern Vietnam and why Viet’s art resonates in the global community, beyond his cultural frame. While Viet’s painting of Nom images have been contrasted to Motherwell’s abstract expressionism, Viet’s work goes well beyond merely challenging the status quo of the artistic world of the day. The basis of his art and his mission is to preserve a dying history hidden in the Nom language and to remain modern in the process. PO BOX 736, south freeport, me 04078 www.pernacontent.com David Thomas John Balaban Gerard Cognie Dr. Nora Taylor Ngô Thanh Nhàn Phan Cam Thoung Suzanne Lecht Artists Culture But Thap Pagodas Han Nom National Library History Vietnamese Values Chua Long Cam Chùa Thắng Nghiêm PO BOX 736, south freeport, me 04078 www.pernacontent.com WHY PEOPLE WILL WANT TO SEE THIS FILM As the world continues to shrink our cultural identities are merging. Much is lost in this process. Le Quoc Viet is an artist who is obsessed with his struggle to maintain Vietnam’s history, customs and distinct culture all the while remaining modern. Le Quoc Viet’s artistic themes are of the Vietnamese amidst the swirl of global issues that the world faces today: loss of original language, traditional customs and culture, changes in the physical landscape of the country and the social dilemma of lost communities. Le Quoc Viet maintains that these issues lead to a “soulless” way of living. PO BOX 736, south freeport, me 04078 www.pernacontent.com WHO WILL WANT TO SEE THIS FILM? Museum Collections of Le Quoc Viet American Museum of Natural History, New York City National Art Gallery Singapore Asian Civilization Museum, Singapore British Museum of London, England Heide Museum of Modern Art, Melbourne Australia Private collectors Le Quoc Viet’s work can be found in some of the most prestigious private galleries of collectors in New York, Paris Buenos Aries, Montreal, Melbourne, Hong Kong, Amsterdam, Bermuda, London, Zurich and Geneva Special Thanks Gerard Cognie Dora Foundation Vietnam Nom Preservation Society Indochina Arts Partnership Art Vietnam PO BOX 736, south freeport, me 04078 www.pernacontent.com Nora Taylor, Alsdorf Professor of South and Southeast Asian Art History, The School of the Art Institute of Chicago Dr. Taylor was one of the very first scholars to appear in Vietnam in 1993. Researching extensively, she was one of the first active promoters of the works of the Vietnamese artists. Dr. Taylor has taught at Arizona State University, University of California, Los Angeles and the National University of Singapore. Having lived and researched in Vietnam for 20 years, she speaks fluent Vietnamese and writes extensively on both modern and contemporary Vietnamese art. She is the author of Painters in Hanoi: An Ethnography of Vietnamese Art and editor of Studies in Southeast Asian Art: Essays in Honor of Stanley O’Connor, as well as numerous articles and essays. She has curated various exhibitions including Changing Identity: Recent Work by Women Artists from Vietnam (traveling 2007-2009) and Blue Memory: Tran Trong Vu (2004, ASU Art Museum). Dr. Taylor continues her research and teaching and regularly lectures abroad and in Vietnam on SE Asian art. Considered a foremost authority on SE Asian Art, Dr. Taylor is an authentic voice on the development of Vietnamese art. PO BOX 736, south freeport, me 04078 www.pernacontent.com “Le Quoc Viet eludes easy categorization. As an artist he is both a modernist and a traditionalist. As a person he is both an anachronism and a product of his time. To simply call him a Vietnamese artist does not begin to do justice to the complexity and originality of his work. And yet, in many ways, he encapsulates what makes Vietnamese art itself so difficult to categorize and so unique at the same time. He can easily serve as a lens through which one can understand the entire history of Vietnamese art from its pre-colonial past to its post-modern avant-garde manifestation. Le Quoc Viet is a calligrapher in an era when Chinese ink painting is no longer in vogue. Like an abstract expressionist or action painter, he performs his Chinese ink painting with a large brush applied to a piece of cloth carefully laid down on the ground. He also paints his writings on robes and lanterns to be worn and paraded in an outdoor procession. Through his calligraphic modernist abstraction, he muses on the significance of Buddhism in contemporary daily life.” Nora Taylor PO BOX 736, south freeport, me 04078 www.pernacontent.com “ Documentation about Vietnamese modern and contemporary art is scarce. Aside from exhibition catalogues and a few scholarly publications, there is generally a lack of understanding among the general public about Vietnamese art outside of Vietnam. Le Quoc Viet provides a perfect window onto contemporary art for a viewer who may know nothing about art from that part of the world. His life story, from his childhood in a Buddhist pagoda, to his forays in calligraphic performance and avant-garde neo-traditionalist practices speaks to audiences worldwide about artistic adaptations to present-day circumstances. A film about Le Quoc Viet would offer audiences a chance to understand how an individual artist lives and works in an environment like Vietnam. Viet provides an example of an "authentic artist," in that his life and art are completely intertwined. He supplies an example of an art that constantly shifts between traditionalism and modernism. His gentle personality and Buddhist philosophy may appear at odds with the fast paced life of Hanoi and yet, audiences would get a chance to understand some of the deeper layers of Vietnamese society and history through Viet's biography.” Nora Taylor PHD, Professor of Southeast Asia Studies, Art Institute of Chicago PO BOX 736, south freeport, me 04078 www.pernacontent.com David Thomas, artist, founder of the Indochina Arts Partnership David Thomas is an artist and Vietnam veteran. One of the first Americans to return to Vietnam in1988, David has worked tirelessly to create a bridge of understanding between Vietnam and America. Founded by Thomas in 1988 to foster cultural understanding through shared art, the non-profit IAP has produced two widely traveled exhibitions of modern work by Vietnamese and American artists. In addition, the Partnership has sponsored residencies in America for more than one hundred Vietnamese visual artists, writers, teachers and leaders of national cultural institutions; and has arranged working journeys to Vietnam for dozens of American counterparts. Originating in Boston as a volunteer organization with nominal funding under the direction of C. David Thomas, a practicing printmaker, Professor of Art, and Vietnam veteran, the IAP has gained a wide reputation in the United States and in Vietnam as a cost-effective collaborative producer of diverse cultural exchange initiatives. http://www.iapone.org. The IAP has supported two residencies for Le Quoc Viet in Boston, the most recent being Viet’s installation and performance The Secret Mantra performed in Cambridge Mass. in 2010. The IAP is now traveling this show and has booked various museums and art institutions for the next two years. PO BOX 736, south freeport, me 04078 www.pernacontent.com David Thomas, artist, founder of the Indochina Arts Partnership “Le Quoc Viet is truly a Renaissance man. He is an artist and scholar of the highest quality who defies any simple description. His intense eyes and startling yet gentle smile with his shiny black teeth give little hint to the depth and strength of his commitment to telling the story of Vietnam's long and rich history through his stunning artwork. He is equally comfortable working on silk, paper, woodcuts or ceramics. He is without question one of the most important artists working in Vietnam or any other country on this planet.” David Thomas PO BOX 736, south freeport, me 04078 www.pernacontent.com Bill Perna, Founder of Perna Content Bill Perna began his career in marketing and advertising after graduating from the University of New Mexico and New York University, where he studied film. His 20 years in the ad industry included stints at Grey Advertising, Wells Rich Greene, and Doyle Dane Bernbach. Bill then spent 10 years in Los Angeles building one of advertising’s most successful commercial production companies, Smillie Films. While serving as president and executive producer at Smillie Films, Bill worked on accounts such as Apple, Coca Cola, IBM, Nike and Anhueser Busch among countless others. All of these engagements gave Bill valuable experience in the planning, directing, and production of commercial film. He has now returned to documentary work, his first calling, to make use of this acquired knowledge. After two terms as president of the Association of Commercial Producers / West Coast and one term as national president, Bill then joined with partner Bob Giraldi to create one of advertising’s first hybrid agencies, Artustry Partnership. This agency had full creative and production capabilities so as to work with clients on a project basis. Following his passion, Bill began working with documentarian Albert Maysles, the noted filmmaker, and for two years created and developed the Branded Content division for Maysles Films. PO BOX 736, south freeport, me 04078 www.pernacontent.com If you would like to join us in helping to complete this film we are be pleased to offer supporters: $15,000 Executive Producer film credit, Original Le Quoc Viet painting. $5000 Producer Film Credit, Le Quoc Viet limited edition Woodcut print. $2500 Edition print of Le Quoc Viet. $1000 Calligraphic work of Le Quoc Viet. (BudgetavailableuponRequest) PO BOX 736, south freeport, me 04078 www.pernacontent.com PO BOX 736, south freeport, me 04078 www.pernacontent.com