BITTER WINTER

Modern Vietnamese Painters in Paris: An Art Full of Spirits

by | Feb 1, 2025 | Featured Global

Lê Phô, Mai Thứ, and Vũ Cao Đàm lived in France and learned French artistic techniques but never forgot the Buddhas and spirits of Vietnam’s tradition.

Massimo Introvigne

Lê Phô’s “Women Arranging Flowers” shows the influence of French impressionists.
Lê Phô’s “Women Arranging Flowers” shows the influence of French impressionists.

Until March 9, Paris’ Musée Cernuschi offers a beautiful exhibition of three modern Vietnamese painters who lived for many years in France: Lê Phô (1907–2001), Mai Thứ (1906–1980), and Vũ Cao Đàm (1908–2000). I should confess that not only I am not an expert of the trio. I had no idea who they were, until my colleague Bernadette Rigal-Cellard, who is in love with all things Vietnamese, persuaded my wife and me to accompany her to see the exhibition.

To be even more honest, I didn’t even know that a Vietnamese modern art had existed before the most recent abstract and postmodernist experiments I had seen in Vietnam. The exhibition explains it was largely a French enterprise. French colonialism created in Hanoi in 1925 the Indochina School of Fine Arts, directed by Victor Tardieu. The most gifted pupils received scholarships to go to France, including the three featured in the Cernuschi exhibition. They went to France in the 1930s and spent most of the rest of their life there. 

The three Vietnamese artists portrayed together. From the Paris exhibition.
The three Vietnamese artists portrayed together. From the Paris exhibition.

They kept a continuous conversation with Vietnam, though. When Hồ Chí Minh as President of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam, visited Paris in 1946, Vũ Cao Đàm sculpted his bust, who was never exhibited and was even hidden for many years due to the deterioration of the relationships between Hồ and France. Mai Thứ, who was also a filmmaker, made a short film about the visit.

Vũ Cao Đàm’s 1946 bust of Hồ Chí Minh.
Vũ Cao Đàm’s 1946 bust of Hồ Chí Minh.

The strength of the Cernuschi exhibition is to show that, having been formed by French academic artists and spent most of their life in France, the three artists remained distinctly Vietnamese. Unlike most of their contemporary Chinese modernists, their art remained rooted in the multiple religious traditions of Vietnam. One of Vũ Cao Đàm’s masterpieces is a Buddha he sculpted in 1933. 

Vũ Cao Đàm’s bust of Buddha (1933).
Vũ Cao Đàm’s bust of Buddha (1933).

Much later, in 1961, when he was living in Saint-Paul-de-Vence, not far from Chagall’s residence, he painted an extraordinary “Divinity,” which is at the same time Buddha, the bodhisattva of compassion Guanyin, and a universal divine figure.

Vũ Cao Đàm, “Divinity” (1961).
Vũ Cao Đàm, “Divinity” (1961).

Both Vũ Cao Đàm and Mai Thứ painted on silk scenes of prayer, drawing on both the Buddhist and the Catholic heritage of modern Vietnam. 

Mai Thứ, “Prayer,” 1963.
Mai Thứ, “Prayer,” 1963.

 “Desolation,” painted by Mai Thứ in 1966 to represent the horrors of the Vietnam War, is also a deeply religious painting, reminiscent of Buddhist and Christian representations of Hiroshima after the bombing by Japanese artists.

Mai Thứ, “Desolation,” 1966.
Mai Thứ, “Desolation,” 1966.

All three artists produced works inspired by the epic novel “The Tale of Kiều” by Nguyễn Du (1765–1820), which are largely featured in the Paris exhibition. Apart from its discussion of prostitution, the “Tale” is full of folk religiosity and spirits. In Vũ Cao Đàm’s “The Dream” (1952), we see the spirit of a deceased prostitute appearing to Kiều.

Vũ Cao Đàm, “The Dream,” 1952.
Vũ Cao Đàm, “The Dream,” 1952.

The very Chagallian “Composition” (1959) also by Vũ Cao Đàm, shows a tomb-sweeping ritual performed by Kiều and her sister Vân, when Kiều’ love, Kim, arrives on horseback. The whole novel is full of Buddhist vows, divinations, and spirits. While honoring Hồ Chí Minh, and being honored in turn by postwar Communist Vietnam, the three Vietnamese artists in France never lost touch with a culture imbued with supernatural elements.

Vũ Cao Đàm, “Composition,” 1959.
Vũ Cao Đàm, “Composition,” 1959.

The two things are not contradictory. As the young Vietnamese scholar Thien-Huong Ninh has demonstrated, there are several new religious movements in Vietnam today where the spirit of Hồ Chí Minh regularly appears. Expelling the spirits from Vietnam has proved more difficult than expelling the French and the Americans.

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