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A new exhibition at
The Bui Gallery in downtown Hanoi has gathered four
photographers, all with vastly different views and subjects
from the capital, to showcase the underlying mysteries of
the city.
Titled Days and
Nights, the exhibition gathers photographers Jamie Maxtone-Graham
from New York City, Nguyen Na Son from Hanoi, Aaron Joel
Santos from New Orleans, and Diego Cortizas from Madrid.
For the show, the
walls of the gallery have been painted black, and black
curtains separate the four rooms, giving each individual
photographer a space to curate their own works. Within these
“black boxes”, viewers must stop to contemplate the works on
their own, with nothing else there to distract or detract
from them.
Maxtone-Graham
contributes the largest number of images among all of the
artists, all taken from his Night Market series. The 21
photographs on display offer candid yet composed views of
labourers, sellers and residents within the Long Bien night
market. His portraits are intense and confrontational, but
they are not without a certain tenderness and tranquility.
Na Son, a resident
Hanoian, is showing only four photographs at the exhibition,
but he says that they show a “profound understanding of the
city”.
Na Son toes the line
between journalism and fine art. He is a freelance
photographer who contributes to the Associated Press in
Vietnam , other newspapers and magazines.
Having lived in
Vietnam for the shortest amount of time among the four
photographers, Santos ’s work depicts the capital’s changing
urban landscape through the sometimes romanticised eyes of a
person still coming to know the city. Working in total black
and white, his images show a city rushing headlong into the
future while desperately trying to retain a large part of
its history. The images feel at once lonely and desolate,
but also filled with hints of hope and joy.
Santos ’s
photographs have been shown in numerous international
publications, as well as in galleries in the US , Malaysia
and Vietnam .
Cortizas, by
contrast, show a secondary city through a series of
reflective surfaces. He chooses the most symbolic places in
Hanoi , like the Opera House, Saint Joseph ’s Cathedral and
Long Bien Bridge . All of his works are on display ad
triptychs, placed in shuttered black boxes. When the
shutters are opened, a skewed and reflective panorama of the
city emerges.
Cortizas lives in
Hanoi with his wife and three children, and also works as a
fashion designer. The exhibition will run at The Bui
Gallergy, at No. 23 Ngo Van So Street, Hanoi, until next
Thursday. (VNA)
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