Museum of East Asian Art Celebrates Hanoi’s 1000th Birthday

In October 2010 Vietnam’s capital city, Hanoi, will celebrate the 1000th year anniversary of its establishment. To mark the occasion, the Museum of East Asian Art is pleased to present a new photographic exhibition “Hanoi: Spirit of a City”, running from the 4th of September until the 12th December 2010.

Hanoi has had a long and complex history, being the on-and-off capital over the course of those 1000 years. In that time, Vietnam as a country experienced great political and social upheaval, reflected in Hanoi’s history as the city passed through Vietnamese, Chinese and French control. In recent history, Hanoi became the capital of Vietnam, when the North and South were reunited at the end of the Vietnam War (1955 – 1975).

During the 1980s, Vietnam was recovering from years of turmoil - not only from the 20 year war that had just come to an end, but also the preceding French-Indochina War (1946 – 1954) and Sino-Indochina War (1979). Although still locked in a series of conflicts throughout this time with Cambodia (The Cambodian-Vietnamese War 1975 – 1989), everyday life continued.

“Hanoi: Spirit of a City” explores the streets of Hanoi in the early of 1980s, capturing everyday scenes and evocative imagery. The photographs were taken over the course of three years as a personal project of Sir John Ramsden, who was stationed in Vietnam with the British Diplomatic Services. During his time in Hanoi, Ramsden became a flâneur of the city, using photography to capture his own experiences and view points of the people and places he encountered on his walks through the busy streets.

Since opening its doors to the public in 1993, the Museum of East Asian Art has been a beacon of East Asian art and culture in the west of England and houses one of the most remarkable collections of art from this part of the world in the United Kingdom. The Museum is open Tuesday to Saturday from 10am to 5pm, Sundays from 12noon until 5pm and 10am to 5pm most bank holiday Mondays.
Source: Linsi Parker-Turner, http://www.meaa.org.uk/

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