East meets West
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Young Chang
In a part of Newport Beach known more for its seafood restaurants,
sailboat-speckled harbor and the Balboa Bay Club, the work of five
Vietnamese artists stands out at djr International Art gallery.
West Coast Highway is not a place one would expect to find art. As its
owner, DeAnna Reposa, explained, “We’re not Laguna.”
But the gallery’s location is what assures her that when visitors
come, they’re not just passing through.
For her current show, titled “Images Vietnam,” her customers include
middle-aged Vietnamese men who sit on the sofa in the middle of the
gallery mesmerized by the paintings before them.
The works by contemporary artists Phan Lam Thuong, Do Quang Em, Nguyen
Thanh Binh, Dang Xuan Hoa and Pham Luan render them proud, Reposa said.
Proud that the Vietnamese are now free to paint whatever they like
without political messages, and proud of the art’s beauty.
“I was interested in having people come in that were actually
interested in art,” she said.
The show, which opened last week and runs through March 10, echoes the
Vietnamese theme of Reposa’s first exhibit held last year. It presents
paintings not usually accessible in America.
The exotic aspect of these works might be what has made the Vietnamese
shows the most popular among Reposa’s exhibits, which include artists
from France, Italy, the San Francisco Bay Area and New York.
“I think anyone feels safe going to Italy or France,” Reposa said.
“But I don’t think a lot of people feel safe going to Vietnam, and it’s
amazing what comes out of there.”
Each artist in the show occupies about a wall and a half of space.
The oil paintings by Em, who met former president Bill Clinton on a
recent trip to Vietnam, are probably the most famous. Reposa has three
pieces hanging on the wall -- “Future of My Life,” “Still Life w/Red Cup”
and “Still Life w/Red Bowl II.”
Em is known for painting portraits of his daughters, his wife and
scenes of items such as teapots and bowls in his home. He has never
painted his son, Chris Em, for the simple reason that the 29-year-old
doesn’t like sitting still for very long.
“When he paints a painting, it takes, for still-lifes, about a month.
And for a portrait, it’s about a month and a half, and I can never stay
[in Vietnam] that long,” said Chris Em, a Los Angeles resident.
He said that people in his country have begun to imitate his father’s
style.
“And the Vietnamese country is very honored to have an artist that is
well known internationally,” Chris Em added.
“Future of My Life” is a unique self-portrait. It depicts the artist
as a puppet on an altar used to honor late ancestors. Asian custom
involves placing a picture of the deceased on an altar with incense and,
often, food.
The portrait “signifies how a dead person feels,” Reposa said.
Adjacent to Em’s works are Binh’s. Known for using neutral tones, such
as shades of white and variations of tan, as well as smatterings of red.
His paintings depict women in traditional white dress and long black
hair. These figures don’t have clear faces -- some have just one black
smudge for an eye, others are turned around. A few have no facial
features at all.
“It kinda makes them seem like they’re hiding, like they’re secret,”
Reposa explained.
Luan’s work shows mostly landscapes. He is an artist who admires
Monet, Reposa said, and the impressionistic influence is evident in his
work. The scenes are mostly of a historic Hanoi that is slowly
modernizing.
The images in Hoa’s paintings experiment with gravity. Bowls are
painted to feature the bottom, cats are vertical, cups are upside down
and lamps are placed sideways instead of upright.
Thuong’s pieces are done in natural mineral colors on silk or other
textures. An art historian as well as a professor of art history,
Thuong’s work often focuses on folk stories and religion. One of his
pieces, titled “Peaceful Moments,” shows two faces of each person -- a
good and a bad, a happy and a sad.
Since opening night, Reposa’s Vietnamese visitors have been quietly
affected by these works.
“It was nice to see grown men so proud about the art,” she said.
FYI
WHAT: Images Vietnam
WHEN: Through March 10. Call for appointments and hours.
WHERE: 2431 W. Coast Highway, Suite 204, Newport Beach
COST: Free
CALL: (949) 548-6249
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