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Lines of Noble Regard: The Venerable Giới Đức (Minh Đức Triều Tâm Ảnh) Writes for Boi Tran, 2004

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A sheet of aged paper, a few strokes of ink, and the authority of a discerning eye. In a brief dedication to Boi Tran, Thượng tọa Giới Đức, known in letters as Minh Đức Triều Tâm Ảnh, offered not casual praise but recognition of something rare: the survival of Hue refinement through house, garden, art and conduct.

Harper’s Bazaar | “Dream of Dreams” Group Exhibition, Poetic Amid the Ancient Capital of Hue

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The exhibition unfolds as a space where imagination is carried across generations, where each work holds a fragment of memory, a longing, and a possibility not yet fully formed. Within this artistic garden, the artists do not tell a single shared story, but instead create a polyphonic field of feeling, rich with layered sensibilities.

Dream of Dreams, A Contemporary Group Exhibition Featuring 8 Vietnamese Artists at Boi Tran Garden

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Dream of Dreams brings together eight Vietnamese artists: Trần Nguyên Đán, Trần Văn Mãng, Phan Thanh Bình, Trần Anh Huy, Nguyễn Vũ Lân, Hoàng Đăng Khanh, Lê Hữu Long and Lê Thừa Hải in a contemplative exhibition at Boi Tran Garden. Conceived not as a narrative but as a state of presence, the exhibition unfolds through subtle correspondences between works, where memory, imagination and painting converge. Each practice remains singular, yet together they form a quiet continuum, like images that return, transform and persist across time.

Boi Tran, The Woman Who Paints the Dream of Hué

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Boi Tran extends her practice beyond painting into the spatial reconstruction of Hue’s aesthetic consciousness. On Thien An and Kim Son hills, she reinterprets the traditional nhà rường within a contemporary garden setting. Her use of wood, brick, tile, and stone and her restraint toward steel and concrete, reflects not nostalgia but a cultural position. For her, architecture is not placed upon the land, but embedded within it. Heritage, therefore, survives not through replicated form, but through the continuity of spirit.

Inside the Philippe Damas Collection and a Historic Christie’s Hong Kong Auction: A Quest for Eternity

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Boi Tran Garden reflects on a defining moment for Vietnamese modern art, following an intimate encounter with collector Philippe Damas and Francis Belin on the eve of Christie’s Hong Kong auction A Quest for Eternity. The landmark sale achieved historic results, setting multiple world records and affirming the growing international recognition of Vietnamese modernism. More than an auction, A Quest for Eternity stands as a testament to scholarship, vision, and the enduring cultural legacy of Vietnam’s artists on the global stage.

Jean-Baptiste Huynh, Paris, or The Distance That Becomes Dialogue

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First encountered Jean-Baptiste Huynh in 2016, a meeting that has since evolved into an ongoing dialogue. From the studio to lived experience, his practice reveals not only technical mastery, but a way of seeing: precise, poetic, and deeply human. Reuniting in Paris in August 2025, the exchange continued through conversation and observation. These moments extend beyond instruction, reflecting a sustained relationship grounded in attention, generosity, and shared inquiry.

Boi Tran, “The Elegants Of Hué”, 2015, or The Inevitable Choice of Distinction Against Fate

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In the hush that follows ruin, some shout; others whisper. Boi Tran paints. The Élégantes de Hue, seven women in flowing áo dài, do not ask to be seen; they endure, as Hue endured. Wounded, quiet, and radiant. Their beauty is not spectacle, but refuge. Melchior Dejouany’s journey into Vietnamese art began not with grandeur, but with the quiet soul of Boi Tran’s lacquer.
Among lacquer and legacy, her work is not loud. It is lasting.

From Lacquer to Light: A French Collector’s Journey Begins with Boi Tran

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French collector Melchior Dejouany once called discovering pictorial lacquer “one of the most beautiful revelations” of his life. That revelation began with a painting by Boi Tran, luminous, quiet, and unforgettable, seen at Christie’s Hong Kong in 2012. In her layered technique, he found something deeper: feeling, stillness, soul. Her work opened not just a door into Vietnamese art, but into a story, one that continues across generations, bound by vision, tenderness, and the quiet power of beauty that travels and connects across oceans.

Christie’s Paris | The Phoenix Glue and the Broken Silk Thread: Important Vietnamese Artworks from the Melchior Dejouany Collection

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The Melchior Dejouany Collection showcases the brilliance of Vietnamese masters: Nguyen Gia Tri’s layered lacquer dreams, Le Pho’s elegant silks, and Vu Cao Dam’s poetic forms. And yet, it began with a single painting by Boi Tran, a quiet work of lacquer that spoke not of grandeur, but of grace. It was her voice, contemporary, contemplative, deeply human, that first drew him in. Among legends, her presence is not loud; it is luminous.

Ngo Manh Duc, Son Of Le Thi Luu, And Boi Tran: Recognition Does Not Require Proximity, Or Where One Way Of Seeing Meets Another

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The exchange between Ngo Manh Duc and Boi Tran did not begin with a meeting, but through the work itself. Having contemplated her lacquer, he recognised in her an artist “amongst the great, very great artists,” a gesture modest in form yet precise in meaning. Following Le Thi Luu, Boi Tran stands among the rare Vietnamese women artists whose work has entered the international art market. What emerges is not proximity, but recognition, when one artistic lineage encounters another.

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Minh Duc Trieu Tam Anh

Lines of Noble Regard: The Venerable Giới Đức (Minh Đức Triều Tâm Ảnh) Writes for Boi Tran, 2004

“Dream of Dreams” Group Exhibition, Poetic Amid the Ancient Capital of Hue

Harper’s Bazaar | “Dream of Dreams” Group Exhibition, Poetic Amid the Ancient Capital of Hue

Dream of Dreams Exhibition

Dream of Dreams, A Contemporary Group Exhibition Featuring 8 Vietnamese Artists at Boi Tran Garden

Dr Phan Thanh Hai & Artist Boi Tran

Boi Tran, The Woman Who Paints the Dream of Hué

Inside the Philippe Damas Collection and a Historic Christie’s Hong Kong Auction: A Quest for Eternity

Jean Baptiste Huynh

Jean-Baptiste Huynh, Paris, or The Distance That Becomes Dialogue

Boi Tran, “The Elegants Of Hué”, 2015, or The Inevitable Choice of Distinction Against Fate

From Lacquer to Light: A French Collector’s Journey Begins with Boi Tran

Christie’s Paris | The Phoenix Glue and the Broken Silk Thread: Important Vietnamese Artworks from the Melchior Dejouany Collection

Ngo Manh Duc (B. 1941), son of Le Thi Luu (Vietnam, 1911-1988) born on 1 January 1941, which he enunciates as “1.1.41” with his constant smile, speaking softly and slowly which never fails to grab the listener’s attention. He was brought up in a wonderful atmosphere of painters and intellectuals (often of Vietnamese origin), and this only helped to cement the ideals and traditions of family, close friends and kinships.

Ngo Manh Duc, Son Of Le Thi Luu, And Boi Tran: Recognition Does Not Require Proximity, Or Where One Way Of Seeing Meets Another

“Ambrosia in All the Details”, and a Conversation with Boi Tran

Boi Tran Garden, an Artistic Space Imbued with the Spirit of Hue

Christie’s Paris | Women in Art From the XVIth to the XXIst Century, or Boi Tran: When a Singular Presence from Vietnam Does Not Remain in the Shadows

Éternité Magazine | Cloud Landing Collection by Photographer Tran Dinh Thuc Doan

Éternité Magazine | Cloud Landing Collection by Photographer Tran Dinh Thuc Doan

The Hue To Go by KF Seetoh | Royal Cuisine & Cultural Interview at Boi Tran Garden

Anne-Solenne Hatte’s “La Cuisine De Bà”, or “Tasting Vietnam” at Boi Tran Garden

“Incubating Culture In Vietnam And Hue’s Rebirth As Vietnam’s Centre Of Art And Heritage” Hosted by Harvard Kennedy School, Fulbright University Vietnam, and Boi Tran Garden, or The Confidence of Institutions

Vu Giang Huong, Painter, General Secretary, Vietnam Fine Arts Association (1984-1989); Tran Khanh Chuong, Painter, President, Vietnam Fine Arts Association (1999-2019); Boi Tran; Hoang Phu Ngoc Tuong, Author and Truong Be, Painter, President, Hue University of Fine Arts (1996-2002), Hue, Vietnam, 1995.

What Can Be Known of a Life? Truong Be, the Absolute, and a Recognition of Boi Tran

Elégantes in Hué | lacquer on panel (triptych) | each 120 x 80 cm (47 1/4 x 31 1/2 in.), overall 120 x 240 cm (47 1/4 x 94 1/2 in.). Hammered Price: USD 15,189 at Ravenel: Select Modern & Contemporary Art, Vietnamese Modern Art, 2019

Ravenel, Vietnamese Modern Art, or the Architecture Of Elegance and the Discipline of Beauty in Boi Tran

A Letter by Dr Volker Wissing, General Secretary, German Minister of Digital Affairs and Transport, or The Civility Of Memory

Boi Tran (Vietnam, B. 1957)
Mother and Children
signed 'Btran' (lower left)
lacquer on panel (triptych)
each 120 x 80 cm. (47 1/4 x 31 1/2 in.)
overall 120 x 240 cm. (47 1/4 x 94 1/2 in.)
Painted in 2010

Thanh Nien News | Complete Transcendence

“A Perfect Evening of Companionship” with Skirball Cultural Centre Founding President and CEO Uri D Herscher at Boi Tran Garden, or Where Hearts Spoke Naturally

An Offering of Silence: The Zen Inscription to Boi Tran

Shanghai Pujiang Southeast Asia Culture and Art Exchange Center President Zhang Zhi Yong Celebrates Boi Tran’s Solo Exhibition: Le Rêve Qui Veille

Text by Christie’s Senior Expert Jean-François Hubert on Boi Tran’s Work at Her Solo Exhibition ‘Le Rêve Qui Veille’, 2017

William Adams, chairman of the National Endowment for the Humanities and a Vietnam veteran, moderates a panel discussion, “The Troops: A View from the Front Lines” on Thursday, April 28, 2016, at the LBJ Presidential Library. The panel discussion was part of the LBJ library’s three-day Vietnam War Summit.

LBJ Library photo by Jay Godwin 04/28/2016

When Conversation Refused To End: Mr William Drea Adams, 10th Chair Of The National Endowment For The Humanities, Mr Joe Boulos, And An Evening At Boi Tran Garden

The Largest Museum in Canada: The Royal Ontario Museum and Its Letter to Boi Tran, or Two Ways of Holding the World

The Largest Museum in Canada: The Royal Ontario Museum and Its Letter to Boi Tran, or Two Ways of Holding the World

Mr Ng Teck Hean was appointed Ambassador of Singapore to the Socialist Republic of Vietnam in August 2012. Prior to his current appointment, he headed the Policy Planning and Analysis Directorate I (Southeast Asia) in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Mr Ng joined the Singapore Foreign Service in 1992. He served his first overseas assignment in the Singapore Embassy in Washington DC, USA, as First Secretary, from 1995 to 1998. Mr Ng was appointed as Special Assistant to then Minister for Foreign Affairs, Professor S Jayakumar, in 2002. He served his next overseas assignment as Deputy High Commissioner in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, from 2003 to 2006.
He was conferred the National Day Award (Public Administration Medal) in 2003 and 2013 by the Government of Singapore.

Diplomatic and Cultural Exchange, or the Practice of Diplomacy as a Lived Experience

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

Group Exhibition "Chòn Chòn"

Group Exhibition “Chòn Chòn”, 2015, Or The Circle As A Shared Horizon Between Hanoi And Hue, With The Support Of Boi Tran Art Gallery

Brigitte Woman: The Kitchen of Smiles

A Diplomatic Encounter: Where Culture Becomes A Language Of State or The Quiet Authority of Culture

Painter Boi Tran depicting her oil painting in 2014

Best of Both Worlds: The Road Ahead Remains Open, The Painter of Poetic Hue

Tran Nguyen Dan, Deputy Director, Vietnam National Fine Arts Museum (1998-2003); Boi Tran and Cao Trong Thiem, Director, Vietnam National Fine Arts Museum (1998-2003); Hanoi, circa 2000.

Cao Trong Thiem, A Letter Of 2013, Or The Moment When An Institution Pauses Before A Lived Space

The Grace of Memory: Boi Tran Through Vinh Tuong’s Letter

Hoang Vien Restaurant, Founded and Managed by Artist Boi Tran

DestinAsian Magazine: Hungry for Hue

Boi Tran and the Language of Taste | A Fork in Asia’s Road: Best Bites of an Occidental Glutton

Anthony Bourdain at Boi Tran Garden | CNN Parts Unknown: Vivacious in Vietnam

Dinh Cuong, Boi Tran, Truong Be and Vinh Phoi, Hue, circa 2010

Boi Tran Through the Eyes of Vietnamese Painters: A Poem by Dinh Cuong

ZDF Journalist Peter Kunz and Painter Boi Tran

Peter Kunz and the Gentle Beauty of Boi Tran Garden: A Conversation of Hearts

Boi Tran Garden and the Gift of Ancestral Recognition, A Tribute Remembered

Where Hearts Meet: Gilbert Montagné’s Tribute to Boi Tran Garden

Travel + Leisure: Vietnamese Food, The Ultimate Food Guide

madonna

Boi Tran’s ‘Madonna’, the First Time Presented and Phenomenally Hammered at Sotheby’s in 2008

Boi Tran and the Sacred Trust: Guarding the Forgotten Sketches of Bui Xuan Phai and a Generation’s Art

Tran Luu Hau (Vietnam, 1928-2020) and Boi Tran on the occasion of Boi Tran's Solo Exhibition: The Call From My Within at Minh Chau Art Gallery, Hanoi, circa 2000.

Beyond Art: Tran Luu Hau, Boi Tran, and the Ethics of Regard

Singapore Delegation at Boi Tran Garden

A Bridge of Grace: Boi Tran Garden Welcomes the Singapore Cultural Delegation

Tran Ninh Ho's Handwriting to Boi Tran, 2005, "To love and esteem Artist Boi Tran and your family. Hanoi, Early Summer 2005."

Boi Tran’s Art Graces the Cover of Poet Tran Ninh Ho’s Poetry Publication

Boi Tran and Nguyen Trong Tao, 2017.

Youth, Flowers, and the Quiet Language of Boi Tran’s The Young Girl and the Flowers

‘I and The Call from Within’ Exhibition: Nguyen Trung on Boi Tran’s World of Grace and Art