Not titled

Collections
1472637
Title
Not titled
Year/Period
2006
Region
Vietnam
Dimension
Image size: 27.5 x 35.0 cm (,
with border: 29.5 x 39.6 cm)
Accession No.
2021-00933

Artists from Vietnam played an integral role in both the First Indochina War (1946-1954), where they fought for independence from French colonial rule, and the Second Indochina War (commonly known as the Vietnam War or the American War), which continued until 1975. Artists documented conditions for soldiers in the battlefields, as well as for civilians in the cities and the countryside. They also created propagandistic and sometimes romantic images to articulate and advocate ideological positions. In the Democratic Republic of Vietnam (DRV or North Vietnam), artists were employed by the military or the state; sometimes their works were created as personal mementoes, and sometimes they were exhibited or published during the wartime. Lê Minh Trường is one of Vietnam’s most celebrated war photographers, especially renowned for his photographs of the Ho Chi Minh Trail, which he developed on-site, despite the difficulties of the technical and material conditions in the field. Alongside his documentary work, he also created portraits of Vietnamese troops. The images in this series have a very dramatic, cinematic quality, making bold use of contrast and composition, suggesting that they were created for propagandistic rather than documentation purposes. In their composition and imagery, they closely resemble some of the war drawings made by artists on similar themes.This artwork is part of a significant collection of drawings, sketches, paintings, posters and photographs in Singapore’s National Collection. These works reflect the diversity of artistic production during the First and Second Indochina Wars among artists affiliated with the communist side of the conflict. Many key figures active as war artists during this period have also had a lasting impact on the development of modern art in Vietnam and beyond.