|
8:30 AM-12:30 PM
Lacquer Painting: Materials and the Arts
Symposium|In cooperation with the National Art Museum Vietnam.
-
Nationales Kunstmuseum Vietnam (2nd Branch), Hanoi
- Language Vietnamese, English with simultaneous translation
- Price Participation on invitation
Main speakers: Professor Dr. Monika Kopplin, Lacquer Museum Münster (Germany), Dr. Dave van Gompel (Netherlands) - expert in the restoration of Japanese lacquer painting, Dr. Marion Duquerroy - University of Paris 1 Pantheon Sorbonne (France).
Each country has its own tradition of lacquer art, which adds up to the diversity of lacquer art in the world.
Juice color is the traditional raw material that is widely used in Southeast Asia in both decorative arts and handicrafts. In Vietnam, there has been a shift from traditional painting techniques to lacquer techniques, which can be traced back to student research at the L’École des Beaux-Arts de l'Indochine in the early 1930s, marking the beginning of Vietnamese lacquer art and which promoted creativity of many generations of painters, which generated step by step modern Vietnamese lacquer art.
The collection of lacquer art occupies an important place for the perception of Vietnamese 20th-century art, especially in the National Museum of Art Vietnam. A lacquer art workshop has practical and theoretical significance and contributes to research, preservation, restoration, exhibition and the presentation of lacquer art.
The symposium "Lacquer Painting: Materials and Art" gathers numerous authors, art critics, painters, paint experts from museums, art and research institutes, private studios of Vietnam to exchange and cooperation. Main speakers are Monika Kopplin, director of the Museum of Lacquer Art Münster (Germany), by Dave van Gompel (Netherlands), expert in the restoration of Japanese lacquer paintings, and Marion Duquerroy - University of Paris 1 Pantheon-Sorbonne (France).
The topics are among others: the concept of lacquer painting, the history of lacquer art, specific requirements for lacquer materials: material properties, painting techniques, preservation and restoration of lacquer paintings, development of technology and materials in lacquer work. Lacquer art and the collection of the same under artistic aspects of the artistic value.
Each country has its own tradition of lacquer art, which adds up to the diversity of lacquer art in the world.
Juice color is the traditional raw material that is widely used in Southeast Asia in both decorative arts and handicrafts. In Vietnam, there has been a shift from traditional painting techniques to lacquer techniques, which can be traced back to student research at the L’École des Beaux-Arts de l'Indochine in the early 1930s, marking the beginning of Vietnamese lacquer art and which promoted creativity of many generations of painters, which generated step by step modern Vietnamese lacquer art.
The collection of lacquer art occupies an important place for the perception of Vietnamese 20th-century art, especially in the National Museum of Art Vietnam. A lacquer art workshop has practical and theoretical significance and contributes to research, preservation, restoration, exhibition and the presentation of lacquer art.
The symposium "Lacquer Painting: Materials and Art" gathers numerous authors, art critics, painters, paint experts from museums, art and research institutes, private studios of Vietnam to exchange and cooperation. Main speakers are Monika Kopplin, director of the Museum of Lacquer Art Münster (Germany), by Dave van Gompel (Netherlands), expert in the restoration of Japanese lacquer paintings, and Marion Duquerroy - University of Paris 1 Pantheon-Sorbonne (France).
The topics are among others: the concept of lacquer painting, the history of lacquer art, specific requirements for lacquer materials: material properties, painting techniques, preservation and restoration of lacquer paintings, development of technology and materials in lacquer work. Lacquer art and the collection of the same under artistic aspects of the artistic value.
Location
Nationales Kunstmuseum Vietnam (2nd Branch)
Hoang Cau Str. 95, alley 31
Hanoi 100000
Vietnam
Hoang Cau Str. 95, alley 31
Hanoi 100000
Vietnam