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Skillfulness

Bringing the quintessence to Hanoi * Business villages, streets, guilds * Not only have brains and hands * The qualification of workers ‘conscience * Business town specialized street

Sowing the Trang An elegance in every family

We all know and are proud that Hanoi is the thousand-year civilized Thang Long land strip; Hanoi is a heroic capital in struggling to protect the country and in creating and labor; Hanoi is the city for peace, the center of politic, culture, science… Mentioning Hanoi, we cannot help emphasizing that this is the elegant Trang An land strip.

The one-thousand-year civilized land

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The youth of Hanoi today

Mentioning Hanoi, people immediately thinks of a thousand-year cultural quintessence with the values which were recognized, honored and became the symbol of Vietnam. They are the thirty six antique streets, One-Pillar pagoda, Quoc Tu Giam Temple of literature, Hoan Kiem Lake, etc.

Craftsman Nguyen Ba Muu: Who brings dried flowers to art

In Ha Noi capital, when talking about flowers and decorative plants, people always think about well-known flower villages, such as Ngoc Ha, Nhat Tan, Tay Tuu and Me Linh. But in the field of making dried flower, only name was mentioned. He is the craftsman Nguyen Ba Muu. He is the vanguard in making dried flowers and using them to create vivid and colorful pictures.

Showing posts with label Ho Chi Minh City Museum.A Thousand Years of Vietnamese Ceramics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ho Chi Minh City Museum.A Thousand Years of Vietnamese Ceramics. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Exhibition presents 1,000 years of Vietnamese ceramic works

An exhibition of Vietnamese ceramics spanning 1,000 years and several dynasties has opened at the Ho Chi Minh City Museum.

Ngan Nam Gom Viet (A Thousand Years of Vietnamese Ceramics) features 260 artefacts that traces the development of national traditional ceramics during the reigns of the Ly, Tran, Earlier Le, Mac, Le Trung Hung (Later Le), and Nguyen dynasties.

The Ly and Tran dynasties, who reigned from the 11th to 15th century, were famous for jade-glazed bowls and tea pots, and glaze ceramics produced in different shades including green, white and brown.

The traditional vocation flourishes to this day in the craft villages of Bat Trang and Phu Lang in Hanoi and Bac Ninh province, respectively.

White-and-blue glazed ceramics having a high, brown base with underglazed cobalt floral decorations were produced from the 15th to 18th century during the Le dynasty as well as the Mac and Le Trung Hung dynasties.

The Nguyen dynasty in 19th and 20th century, the last of the feudal rulers in Vietnam, saw the development of Vietnamese ceramics in southern region.

Lai Thieu in Binh Duong province, Bien Hoa in Dong Nai province and Cay Mai in HCM City's Cho Lon (Big Market) emerged as famous centres of ceramic production.

The exhibition is being organised by the HCM City Museum, Vietnam History Museum in HCM City, HCM City Fine Arts Museum, Southern Women's Museum, HCM City Antiques Association and private collectors to celebrate the 1,000th anniversary of Hanoi./.

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