On 16 March 2017, Boi Tran Garden welcomed two distinguished American guests: William Drea “Bro” Adams, then Chair of the National Endowment for the Humanities, and entrepreneur-philanthropist Joe Boulos. What began as dinner became one of those rare evenings when thought, memory, hospitality and shared curiosity extended naturally beyond the table. Later, Adams would write simply: “It will certainly be one of the highlights of our trip.”
Author: Dinh Thuc Doan Tran (Dinh Thuc Doan Tran)
The Largest Museum in Canada: The Royal Ontario Museum and Its Letter to Boi Tran, or Two Ways of Holding the World
In 2016, the Royal Ontario Museum addressed a letter to Boi Tran as part of its Indochina cultural tour, marking a moment in which an institutional journey extended beyond its own structures to encounter a space where art and life remain inseparable.
Diplomatic and Cultural Exchange, or the Practice of Diplomacy as a Lived Experience
Boi Tran Garden is privileged to welcome a cultural exchange between the Vietnamese and Singaporean delegations, unfolding not as a formal event, but as a moment of shared presence. The occasion brought together H.E. Le Hoai Trung, Member of the Politburo of the Communist Party of Vietnam, Secretary of the Party Committee, Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam, Member of the National Defence and Security Council, and Member of the National Assembly (16th legislature); Mr Ng Teck Hean, Deputy Secretary (Asia-Pacific), Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Singapore and Ambassador of Singapore to the Socialist Republic of Vietnam; Mr Nguyen Van Cao, Chairman of the Thua Thien Hue Provincial People’s Committee; and painter Boi Tran, whose convergence reflected a meeting point between diplomacy and cultural stewardship.
A First for Vietnam: Thuc Doan and Christie’s, or The First Vietnamese Woman to Contribute to a Landmark Vietnamese Art Auction “Se Souvenir Des Belles Choses: A Curated Collection of Vietnamese Art” as an Art Advisor and Translator
In 2016, during the 250th anniversary year of Christie's, a landmark sale devoted to Vietnamese art was presented in Hong Kong under the title Se Souvenir Des Belles Choses. Among those contributing behind the scenes was Thuc Doan, recognised as the first Vietnamese woman to assist Christie’s in such a capacity as translator, advisor and cultural interlocutor.
Group Exhibition “Chòn Chòn”, 2015, Or The Circle As A Shared Horizon Between Hanoi And Hue, With The Support Of Boi Tran Art Gallery
Boi Tran Art Gallery is honoured to support the group exhibition “Chòn Chòn,” as part of its sustained engagement in nurturing younger generations of artists and contributing to a broader ecosystem in which contemporary Vietnamese art continues to evolve and expand.
Brigitte Woman: The Kitchen of Smiles
Boi Tran is not only a distinguished Vietnamese artist and garden architect, but also a gifted cook. To be received by her in the former imperial city of Hue is both a pleasure and a discovery. Within a secluded garden of lotus ponds and wooden architecture, everything has been shaped by her own hand. Here, cooking becomes more than craft; it is an extension of life, rooted in the refined traditions of Hue and guided by balance, precision, and memory. What emerges is not simply a meal, but a quiet harmony, where art, space, and gesture come together as one.
A Diplomatic Encounter: Where Culture Becomes A Language Of State or The Quiet Authority of Culture
Formally requested by Vietnam First Lady Mai Thi Hanh, Boi Tran Garden was privileged to host a cultural exchange meeting combined with Hue royal refined music and Hue fine dining on the official first foreign visit to Vietnam of Laos First Lady Naly Sisoulith.
Best of Both Worlds: The Road Ahead Remains Open, The Painter of Poetic Hue
The path of art is vast and endless. It always urges us to work and create without rest. For painter Boi Tran, when holding a brush, a palette knife, or a pen, all can become works of art. And this garden is also a work that she cherishes. It has no boundary between surrealism and realism. And that is exactly the artistic path that she has chosen.
Cao Trong Thiem, A Letter Of 2013, Or The Moment When An Institution Pauses Before A Lived Space
On 14 November 2013 in Hue, a letter was left for Boi Tran, signed by Cao Trong Thiem. He did not come alone. Alongside him were Phan Van Tien, Vi Kien Thanh, and Le Van Suu; figures who, each in their own capacity, embody the institutional structure of Vietnamese art.
Yet what was left behind was not a statement of authority, but a gesture. Not institutional, but human.
The Grace of Memory: Boi Tran Through Vinh Tuong’s Letter
Remembering an evening on Thien An Hill, Emeritus Professor Vinh Tuong writes of an encounter where hospitality and art became indistinguishable. In the quiet presence of Boi Tran’s paintings, meaning did not declare itself, but emerged slowly, through silence and attention. What remained was not simply admiration, but a memory shaped by feeling as much as by form.









