At Minh Chau Gallery, Vietnam’s great masters spoke in small, tender strokes: portraits, landscapes, memories distilled to palm-sized grace. Amid them, Boi Tran’s presence shimmered like silk: luminous, gentle, quietly enduring. These were more than paintings. They were moments held close. Echoes of beauty that linger in stillness.
Category: <span>Art</span>
Small and Miniature Masterpieces: The Art of Vietnam’s Iconic Artists
In each small frame, a world unfolds: tender, intimate, and quietly profound. From Bui Xuan Phai’s ink-drawn matchbox portraits to Nguyen Trung’s reflective sketches, these miniature masterpieces speak not of scale, but of soul. Rooted in centuries of artistic tradition, yet wholly Vietnamese in spirit, they remind us that greatness often comes gently, in the smallest of gestures.
Minh Chau Art Gallery: A Quiet Keeper of Vietnamese Legacy
Tucked within the storied streets of Hanoi, Minh Chau Art Gallery offers more than paintings; it offers remembrance. A sanctuary of light and lineage, it gathers the works of Vietnam’s most beloved masters: Nguyen Gia Tri, Bui Xuan Phai, Nguyen Trung, and among them, the gentle spirit of Boi Tran.
Founded by Minh Chau, herself born of Hue’s artistic soil, the gallery reflects a devotion to heritage both personal and national.
Hue to the World: Boi Tran Art Gallery, A Pioneer Recognised by Christie’s in 1999
In December 1999, a letter arrived from Christie’s, full of grace. It crossed borders to honour a pioneering art gallery in Hue, where Boi Tran had quietly nurtured not just art, but meaning. At a time when few heard the voices of contemporary Vietnam, her gallery had already become a sanctuary of beauty, memory, and soul.
The letter was not a headline. It was something rarer: a moment of quiet recognition.
And from that stillness, Hue began to speak. And the world began to listen.
Le Ba Dang and Boi Tran: A Letter, A Promise, and the Quiet Measure of Trust
Long before these letters were written, the connection had already been established. It was Lê Bá Đảng who sought out Bội Trân, recognising in her not a function, but a presence. The letters from Paris do not begin a relationship; they return to one already known. What they reveal is not how a bond is formed, but how it endures, quietly, without declaration, sustained by a trust that requires neither explanation nor proof. In this way, Bội Trân emerges not as intermediary, but as something rarer, a point of return for artists, where continuity is held, and where trust remains unspoken, yet certain.
Mai Van Hien, 1998, Or A Letter At The Crossroads Of Generations And The Formation Of A Private Art Centre
Mai Van Hien, a key figure of modern Vietnamese art, addressed a handwritten letter in 1998 to Boi Tran Art Gallery on the occasion of its opening. Modest in tone, he offered his wishes while referring to himself with humility. Today, within Boi Tran Garden, the letter stands as an early recognition of a space that would come to connect generations of Vietnamese artists.
Vinh Phoi And Boi Tran Art Gallery: A Reference Letter, 1996, or the Simplest Form of Moral Authority and Trust in Art
Dated 4 May 1996 in Hue, the letter bears the signature of Vinh Phoi (1938–2017). In a few restrained lines, he introduces a young painter and entrusts his evaluation to Boi Tran. There is no rhetoric, only a gesture of trust; a signature whose authority rests not on institutions, but on the life behind it.
It is not merely a recommendation, but a moral guarantee.
Curated by Boi Tran Art Gallery with a Preamble by Nguyen Trung: A Poem in Form and Colour, Hue, 1996, or the First Resonance of the Gallery
Curated by Boi Tran Art Gallery in 1996, this early exhibition marked the emergence of a space rooted in a simple devotion to art and supported by artists across Hue, Hanoi, and Saigon. In his preamble, Nguyen Trung described it as “a poem in form and colour,” a first resonance of a space that would come to connect generations of Vietnamese artists.
Boi Tran Art Gallery in Trinh Cong Son’s Epilogue: A Tender Monument Remembered
Even if small or not, this art gallery is a monument in the city; its appearance will be remembered for ever. Returning to the old city…, to this art gallery, one feels that as he or she is coming back to see a sweetheart, who one will miss and love and never forget for a moment.
A Prologue by Buu Y: Boi Tran Art Gallery and the First Form of Art in Hue
Once no art exhibitions have been organized with their actual sense; there would not have been any complete, conventional conformality to the land and her history.









