Art of Vietnam
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Art of Vietnam - Catherine Noppe
Publishing Director: Jean-Paul Manzo
Text: Catherine Noppe, Jean-François Hubert Translation: Ethan Rundell, Arthur Borges Design: Cédric Pontes
Layout: Stéphanie Angoh
© 2023 Confidential Concepts, worldwide, USA
© 2023 Parkstone Press International, New York, USA
Photographic copyrights:
© asipeo/Loi Nguyên Khoa: ill. 1, 4, 5, 8, 12, 44, 76, 99, 115, 116, 141, 142, 143, 165, 188, 192, 193, 197, 198, 201, 202, 209
© All rights reserved
We would like to extend special thanks to the Musée Royal de Mariemont, to Mrs. Catherine Noppe, Mr. Jean-François Hubert and all the private collectors for their invaluable cooperation.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or adapted without the permission of the copyright holder, throughout the world.
Unless otherwise specified, copyright on the works reproduced lies with the respective photographers. Despite intensive research, it has not always been posible to establish copyright ownership. Where this is the case we would appreciate notification.
ISBN: 978-1-78310-725-4
Catherine Noppe, Jean-François Hubert
Art of Vietnam
Contents
Introduction Land and Water
Chapter 1 Van Lang and Au Lac, the First Kingdoms
Chapter 2 Chinese Domination and its Heritage
Chapter 3 The First National Dynasties: The Ly (1009-1225) and the Trân (1225-1400)
From Hoa Lu’ to Thang Long: The Capitals of the National Dynasties
Buddhist Architecture in the Time of the Ly
Ly and Trân Ceramics
Trân Hu’ng Dao and the Struggle Against the Mongols
Chapter 4 Champa Kingdom
Chapter 5 The Lê Dynasty
Hôi An
Buddhist Statuary Art
The Temple of Literature and the Confucian Manifesto
The Community Hall (Dinh)
Ceramics and the Lê Dynasty
Chapter 6 Hue and the Dynasty of the Nguyên
The Imperial City
The Blues of Hue
Chapter 7 French Influence
French Colonial Architecture
Vietnamese Modern Art
Chapter 8 The Arts of the Minorities
Conclusion
Appendix
Historic Maps
Bibliography
Glossary
Chronology
1. Draining the rice fields, photograph by Loi Nguyen Khoa
Introduction
Land and Water
Situated on the eastern extremity of what is known as Southeast Asia, Vietnam finds itself at the confluence of two worlds. With China to the north and Laos and Cambodia to the west, Vietnam has long been subject to a double-influence; one nicely captured by the French term, first introduced in the 1840s, Indochine
(Indo–China).
Endowed with a coastline more than two thousand kilometers long, Vietnam’s eastern seaboard gives it access not only to the Philippines and Indonesia, but also to China and Japan, commercial opportunities that were first exploited in the fifteenth century.
Vietnam’s tropical climate differs from north to south. While the north of the country enjoys four distinct seasons and receives monsoons in both winter and summer, the south has only two seasons, one dry, and the other rainy.
Two baskets of rice suspended on a yoke
; such is the image most frequently cited by the Vietnamese to evoke the shape of their country as it appears on a map. In this image, the yoke – in fact, a long bamboo pole split along its length and carried on the shoulders to assist in transport of all sorts – represents the Tru’o’ng So’n Mountains, otherwise known as the Annamite Mountain Range
, the backbone of the country and principal frontier with its western neighbors. The two baskets of rice
which hang from the extremities of the yoke correspond to the Red River (Song Hong) in the north and the Mekong River (Cu’u Long) in the south.
These low countries, particularly well-suited to rice field irrigation (there are two monsoons annually in the north and three in the southern and intermediate market areas) and consequently overpopulated, sometimes leads one to forget that Vietnam (with a total area of 329,000 km²) contains twice as much mountainous area as plains. Indeed, it is in Vietnam that one finds the highest summit in Southeast Asia, Mount Fansipan (3143m).
In addition to the forest covered and virtually uninhabited Tru’o’ng So’n Mountains, the country also possesses a moderate Middle Region
in the north and High Plateaus
in the center and south. In many cases, the latter only expire when they reach the Eastern Sea – for example, at Porte of Annam, which gives access to the entire central region and the Collar of Clouds between Hue and Danang.
During the colonial era, Vietnam’s three regions – Northern (Bac Bo), Central (Tru’ng Bo), and Southern regions (Nam Bo) – were rebaptized Tonkin, Annam, and Cochinchine. Tonkin comes from the name Dong Kinh, capital of the east
, as Hanoi was known in the sixteenth century; Annam, South Pacific
, was the name conferred on the country by the Chinese during the Tang Dynasty (618–906 AD); the term Cochinchine
, though invented by Westerners, also derives from Dong Kinh.
Although each of these three regions still plays an important cultural role, the most important regional division in the country, as we shall see later, is that between the plains and the High Plateaus.
The chain of limestone mountains in the north of the country, including the fantastic isles of the Bay of Ha Long (the dragon which descends towards the sea
), are geologically similar to the Guangxi formations of China. Just like the mountains of the central region, they are penetrated by innumerable caves, long considered sacred places giving access to the entrails of the Earth. Stalactites and stalagmites of bizarre shapes are given names in accordance with their form and have been known to come in such shapes as geckos, elephants, tortoises, Buddha’s heart
, and even, in a cave that was only recently discovered on an island in the Bay of Ha Long, an astonishing profile of former President Ho Chi Minh. Since prehistory, two great rivers, the Red River and the Mekong, have graced the country with diverse and profoundly civilizing influences. With a length of 1,200 kilometers, the Red River has its source in the Chinese province of Yunan.
The Mekong, meanwhile, runs for 4,200 kilometers in a general north-south direction before evaporating into a vast delta. Beginning in the Tibetan plateau, it passes through China, travels along the Laotian–Burmese border, and then crosses Cambodia before entering Vietnam.
Sources of life and the foundation of regional rice patty irrigation, the waters of these great rivers are also prone to terrifying floods against which the population struggles without cease via an ever more perfected series of dams. In addition to these great rivers and their tributaries, numerous waterways, generally oriented northwest/southwest, make their way through the mountains to the Eastern Sea, crossing slender bands of coastal plains as they do so. These rivers supply a large part of the population with fish, snails, and diverse crustaceans. One need only glance at the iconography that characterizes the various ceramics, blue and white
porcelain, and enamel work of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries – crabs, shrimp, fish, waterfowl, lotus and other Asiatic plants are everywhere in evidence – to grasp the vital importance that waterways have long played in Vietnamese culture.
For all that, the resources of the sea itself are in no way neglected: prehistoric coastal cultures have left traces of their existence in the form of great heaps of seashells along the shores of Vietnam’s northern and central coast.
Indeed, net fishing is still practiced today in these areas. It is significant that, in Vietnamese, the expression dât nu’o’c – land and water – signifies country
. These two elements combine to make Vietnam a piecemeal country, rich in contrasts and particularities and, as a consequence, difficult to unify politically. Corresponding to this astonishing physical geography is a remarkable degree of human diversity, something characteristic of Southeast Asia more generally.
2. Pier on the Yen Vi river leading to the Perfume Pagoda (Chua Hu’o’ng, a pelerinage site), in the Ha Tây province
3. Artificial mountain in a courtyard. The Temple of the White Horse (Dên Bach Ma) in Hanoi
4. Drawing water, 1955, photograph by Loi Nguyen Khoa
5. Reparing the fishnets, photograph by Loi Nguyen Khoa
6. The throwing of the fishnets
7. Rice field and floodbank, province of Hai Du’ong
Ethnic Mosaic
The legend of Vietnam’s origin takes account of the plains-mountain polarity. According to this story, the Dragon King, Lac Long Quân, married the Immortal Au Co’ and together they bore one hundred sons. However, one day Au Co’ said to her royal husband: Sire, you are of the Dragon race while I am of that of the Immortals: we must separate.
Fifty sons then left with their father to populate the country’s low countries while fifty others accompanied their mother into the mountains. In this manner, the different populations of the country were born. Today, the population of Vietnam consists of fiftyfour distinct ethnic groups.
With a total population estimated at nearly eighty million individuals, the Viet or Kingh – the descendants of Lac Long Quân – are in the majority while the so-called national
or minority
ethnicities comprise only around fifteen percent of the population. Traditionally occupying the plains and the deltas, the Viet commenced their March to the South
beginning in the eleventh century – a Nam Tiên destined to give them access to new regions propitious to irrigated rice farming. The small coastal plains, which sprinkle the seaboard from north to south, were apparently not adequate to satisfy the Viet’s desire for land; having conquered first the Joncs Plains and then the Mekong Delta, the Viet today extend all the way into the highlands.
The Viet traditionally live in villages united by a perfect solidarity born of the constant struggle against the water and the construction of dams. The ancestor cult that they practice guaranties the cohesion of the clan, or extended family, and also assures its prosperity as the deceased (or so it is said) continue to watch over their descendants. This cult, observed by the elder son, requires that the ancestors be commemorated on particular dates both within the family shrine and also at their burial place. Assuring a proper burial place for the predecessors is a sacred obligation that the horrors of the twentieth century have unfortunately made impossible in many cases. The celebration of lost souls
, which takes place each year just before mid-autumn in the traditional lunar calendar, seeks to appease the spirits of those who have been deprived of burial.
Under such complex circumstances, it is difficult to settle on an acceptable classification of the minorities living in Vietnam. Taking into account the great cultural areas
, one can distinguish for example the Cham, descendants of the Indian-influenced kingdom of Champa, the Hoa, Chinese in origin, and the Khmer, who live along the Mekong Delta.
Pioneers in a domain that has since been more fully explored by Vietnamese researchers, the scientific world owes a great debt to such French ethnologists as Georges Condominas, Jacques Dournes, and Jeanne Cuisinier, who devoted their lives to the study of the oral literature, customs, and beliefs of Vietnam’s Highland minorities.
Thanks to these efforts, one can now attempt a classification of Vietnamese minorities according to the ethno-linguistic groups to which they belong. The first thing to note is that every linguistic family of Southeast Asia is represented on the territory of Vietnam. Some of these groups were among the first inhabitants of the country; others arrived due to historical accidents in diverse epochs.
The Austro-Asiatic group contains those who speak Viet-mu’o’ng and Môn-Khmer. The Mu’o’ng, a group that occupies the mountains in the region of Hoa Binh and Thanh Hoa, are considered to be close cousins of the Viet. Less influenced by Chinese culture than their neighbors, they have conserved certain traces of the Dông So’n civilization of the first millennium BC.
The Môn-Khmer-speaking population, small islands of which are to be found from the northwest to the south of the country, mainly consists of small groups of Khang, Khmu, and Mang but also, in the central highlands, of Ba Na, Xo’ Dang, Mnông (a group severely affected by the Vietnam War), and, along the Mekong Delta, of Khmer.
The Malayo-Polynesian group (also called austronesian
) consists of the central highland groups of the Gia Rai, the Ede, and also the Cham, the last descendants of the Indian kingdom who, until their elimination by the Dai Viet, occupied the Center and the south of the country. In the northwest of the country are to be found a dozen ethnic groups belonging to the Tibeto-Burmese family. These are mainly concentrated in the valleys and low mountains along Vietnam’s frontier with Laos and China.
The Thai-Kadai group includes the Thai, who occupy high valleys (from 600 to 900 meters) into which about a million of them moved beginning in the ninth century, and also the Tay of Lang So’n and Cao Bang, an earlier, more Vietnamized
group.
The H’mong and the Dao of the northwest, members of the Miao-Yao group who occupy the country’s highest altitudes, only began to migrate into what is today Vietnam beginning in the eighteenth century.
Depending on their number (from several hundreds to more than a million), their social structure, and their stage of development, these ethnic groups enjoy very different lots. But, in general, their way of living differs radically from that of the inhabitants of the plains.
8. Ancestral cult, funeral procession, photograph by Loi Nguyen Khoa
9. Tomb, Hue
10. A buffalo and a child returning from the rice fields
11. Children playing with their buffalos
12. Buffalos returning from the rice fields, photograph by Loi Nguyen Khoa
Rice Patty and Forest Civilizations
The rice patty civilization of the plains and deltas, which we shall examine in greater detail in the first chapter, is founded on the unchanging progression of the seasons: plowing, sowing, and extraction, followed by the transplantation of the young rice plants, weeding, irrigation, and finally harvest. The Vietnamese peasant, it is said, offers his back to the sun and his face to the earth
. This way of life, shared by millions of peasants across Southeast Asia and Indonesia, is poetically captured by the image of the child who sits or lies upon the back of the water buffalo after whom he looks as it grazes. An indispensable and much respected partner, the buffalo is the peasant’s assistant in the rice patties. As the popular song goes:
"Oh buffalo, listen to what I tell you, my buffalo.
Come to the rice patty and work with me;
Work and replanting are the duties of the farmer.
Me on this side, you on the other, which of us supports the other?"
(Translated by Lê Thanh Khôi. Quoted from Aigrettes sur la rizière. Classic songs and poems of Vietnam, Paris, Gallimard, 1995, Connaissance de l’Orient)
The child – like the buffalo, an essential part of the family’s wealth – is typically pictured sheltering under a large round lotus leaf as one might in the shade of a parasol or lightly tossing his large straw hat into the air while picking off a few notes on his bamboo flute. Popular prints often illustrate this theme of the child and the buffalo, an image associated with the idea of peace and prosperity, something that has long been little more than a dream for the people of Vietnam.
In yet another domain of popular art, marionette performances on water (mua rôi nu’o’c) similarly illustrate the civilization of the rice patty. While shadow theaters, marionettes, and puppet shows are often