Monday, June 1, 2026

Artist of the Day, June 1, 2026 : Nguyen Phan Chanh, a Vietnamese painter (#2541)

 Nguyen Phan Chanh (1892 -1984) was born in a rural Vietnamese village, in Nghe Tinh province. His early education was in Chinese (as was common in pre-colonial times), and he studied Chinese calligraphy so as to pass the qualifying exams for the title of Mandarin. However, the exams were abolished before he was old enough to sit them. With his first ambition thwarted, it was decided that he should continue studying painting at the l'Ecole des Beaux-arts d'Indochine.

The pamphlets describing the goals for l'Ecole des Beaux-arts d'Indochine used the phrase “to transform the indigenous craftsmen into professional artists” which reflects the colonial mind-set of civilizing and educating "the natives". 

Chanh was one of the early entrants to the newly opened French-established l'Ecole des Beaux-arts d'Indochine in 1925, 33 years of age, older than many of his classmates, and from a different and more rural geographical region. According to Boi Tran Huynh "Chanh was considered a rather awkward student, who insisted on maintaining tradition" and it has been suggested that his peers and French tutors considered his focus on representing village life rather unsophisticated and old-fashioned. Whilst Chanh had struggled with oil painting, he "established himself as a master" at silk painting.

Painting on silk is considered to be a traditionally Chinese art form, although Chanh argued it "expressed the national (Vietnamese) character to the highest degree" and goes on to talk about the enthusiastic reception given to his and other artists in their exhibition in Hanoi, 1954-1955, where opinion stated that the paintings were "neither Chinese, Japanese or French." (i.e. that they were distinctively Vietnamese). The emphasis given to silk painting being an art form which effectively expresses Vietnam"s national identity reflects the political context of the times, and the directives from Truong Chinh (Marxism and Vietnamese Culture) and Ho Chi Minh, that art should follow the socialist agenda and be a form of propaganda, glorifying the peasants and soldiers of Vietnam.

Chanh participated in both National resistance wars, was a keen patriot, and in the post-colonial era (after 1945) was praised for the fact that his artwork that illustrated Vietnamese village life and history in modest and simple terms, often interpreted as a continuation of native "folk" art tradition, which in the newly established republic represented his resilience against foreign domination.

Chanh experienced, and was inevitably influenced, by the rapidly changing politics and external influences (particularly in education) in Vietnam during his lifetime, most notably Chinese and French; however, his work is unique, elegant and poignant, and is internationally recognized as such.

In 2013, at Christie's Hong Kong, Chanh's La Marchand de Riz [The Rice Seller], initially valued at just 50 pounds sterling ($75) sold for HK$3.03 million ($390,000) setting a record for a work by a Vietnamese artist. When the British seller of the 1932 work took it to Christie's in London, it was mistakenly identified as a Chinese work because the artist signed his name in Chinese characters. After it was forwarded to specialists in Asia, they recognized the painting by the artist"s signature in romanized characters on the back of the canvas and valued it at between HK$800,000 and HK$1 million.

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Nguyen Phan Chanh
Les Chanteuses de Campagne, 1930
Les Couturières, 1930
L'acupunctrice, 1931
La sorcière, 1931
Le Jeu des Cases Gagnantes, 1931
Le Jeu des Cases Gagnantes, 1931
Les Teinturières, 1931
Petite fille au perroquet, 1931
The Sorcerer, 1931
Winter is Coming, 1931 
Winter is Coming, 1931 
The Singers in the Countryside, 1932
La Marchande de canne à sucre, 1932
La Marchande de Riz, 1932
La marchande de thé, 1932
Laveuse de riz, 1932
Jeune vietnamienne se coiffant, 1933
La traversée du pont, 1934-35
Jeune femme à la lecture, 1936
La femme dans la rizière, 1936
Off to work in the fields, 1937
Rural Market, 1937
Two Women by the River, 1938
L'heure du thé, 1945
Les lapins, 1957
La traversée du pont, 1958
La toilette, 1959
Le repas de bonne récoltes, 1960
Allaitant son nourrisson à l'aube, 1970