Tiến quân qua rừng (Operation through the jungle)

Title
Tiến quân qua rừng (Operation through the jungle)
Creator
Year/Period
1973
Region
Vietnam
Object Type
Technique
Dimension
Image size: 36.0 x 46.0 cm (,
with border: 45 x 55cm)
Accession No.
2021-01024

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. Trinh Kim Vinh (1933-) is celebrated as one of the few women who became prominent war artists in Vietnam. She studied at the Vietnam Fine Art College from 1964-69, and then took up teaching at the college. She later studied lithography at a postgraduate level at the Academy of Fine Arts (Hochschule fur Bildende Kunste) in Dresden from 1970 to 1973. Her sketches and paintings from the late 1960s mostly depict women involved in the war effort.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.