Le Quang Ha Essay
Painting: The Dictator (1963) Done by: Le Quang Ha Oil on Canvas 250 x 300 cm
Background Information on Le Quang Ha
Le Quang Ha was born in Hanoi in 1963 and graduated from the Hanoi Industrial College of Fine Arts in 1992. Le Quang Ha avoids traditional, academic subjects in his art, and instead chooses to address issues that many artists prefer to overlook or even ignore in their work. There is much vitality, meaning, and social critique in the brutal honesty of his art. With its ironic comments, his art addresses subjects, which the young generations of Vietnam are confronted with. The works present a sophisticated discourse on the clashes between tradition and the modern values of contemporary Vietnam. In Vietnam, his art is still regarded as an outburst within the official and social framework, and are regularly populated with police and military officers as he often comments on the corruption and greed of the country. Nevertheless, it is the very controversy that he arouses which has become the leading indicator of the importance of his art. Le Quang Ha has participated in several exhibitions in Vietnam. He has also taken part in shows in Germany (1992, 1996, 1997), China (1993), Switzerland (1996, 2001, 2004), Hong Kong (1997), Japan (1998), USA (1998, 1999, 2006), Korea (1999), Indonesia (2001), and Great Britain (2005).. His paintings are in the permanent collections of the Fukuoka Asian Art Museum, Japan and the Singapore Art Museum.

http://www.thavibu.com/vietnam/le_quang_ha/VIE2900.htm
The Dictator
In this painting, a metallic god-like figure with eight arms grasps the air in all directions, morphing from a pile of machinery — a disturbed view of the industrialization in the cities as Vietnam wins manufacturing business from China. Its eight arms extend menacingly towards the viewer against a background of industrial machinery, and the figure spreads across almost the entire width of the painting, and forms the main focus of the work. In the background, the space is jammed tight with piles of machinery that seem to be part pf the figure’s mutation. The impact and effects of modernization are expressed strongly here; highlighting the negative consequences that the socio-economic changes that are taking place in Vietnam today may have on the environment and the human condition.
Unlike their Chinese counterparts, with their all-out commentaries on the politics of Mao Zedong and fast-developing consumerism through the political pop and cynical realism movements, Vietnamese artists took a much more introspective approach when they were finally given some freedom. Artists have dismissed collectivism in style, and traditional topics of leaders, peasants and soldiers, have been replaced by flowers, fishes and women.
The Vietnamese didn’t have a strong Cultural Revolution and they didn’t have a strong cult following of Ho Chi Minh, nor do they have a downfall from Ho Chi Minh, so they can’t use his image, while the Chinese have allowed Mao’s image to be propagated popularly in a way the Vietnamese government won’t allow. Ho’s image is still taboo. However, there are still a few works that show that some Vietnamese artists are trying to push the country’s boundaries in term of social and political commentary. And of which includes Le Quang Ha”s “The Dictator”.
The machinery in the background is carefully modeled and painted, with much detail, making it seem as if they have come alive, and have a life of their own. There is careful blending, and brushstrokes can barely be seen, making the monster look realistic even though it does not exist in reality. His choice of colours, monochromatic of mostly, grey, white and dark blue, gives the painting a sense of gloom and darkness, and the feelings evoked upon looking at this painting are definitely not positive. The stretching out of the arms towards different directions also gives the painting a sense of space, while at the same time portraying a sense of hopelessness, as if the monster is lost, and is trying to find his way out. This may in turn portray the situation in which Vietnam is in – a mess, and without any way out. No matter how hard the country is searching, it may probably be a long time before the can come out of this mess, and it is the country’s poor folks that are suffering the most in this stampede of industrialization as everyone tries to scramble to the top.
References: http://www.lequangha.com/page.aspx?page_code=LQH.Text&ContentItemID=2278&languageCode=en&ds=895http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601088&sid=aIM6WG_yBT5Q&refer=muse




















