Boi Tran Garden blooms with memory, devotion, and the gentle breath of art. Created by painter Boi Tran as a sanctuary for the soul, it is a place where silence speaks, and beauty lingers in every stone and shadow. In 2011, her heartfelt contributions were honoured with the Phan Kinh Honorary Prize, a tribute from her ancestral family, offered in deep gratitude.
More than a garden, it is a living poem. A return. A bloom that never fades.
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In the quiet pavilions of Boi Tran Garden, where art, flavor, and kindness bloom as one, the legendary Gilbert Montagné found not just a table, but a home. Here, beauty is shared, hearts are opened, and every guest is invited to join a living masterpiece.
In Hue, flavors whisper where history once roared, a quiet kingdom of tastes, where each dish is a gentle invitation to slow down, to listen, and to remember.
First presented and auctioned at Sotheby’s in 2008, Madonna marks a quiet milestone in Boi Tran’s artistic journey. Rooted in solitude, shaped by grace, the work reflects her devotion to the timeless feminine, serene, wounded, yet transcendent. It was not just her first auctioned painting. It was a moment where the world paused to listen.
Entrusted by artist Luu Ly, Boi Tran is called to a sacred task: to preserve the forgotten sketches of Bui Xuan Phai and the spirit of a generation who lived, dreamed, and created through war and silence. More than a keeper of drawings, she becomes the guardian of Vietnam’s artistic soul, where memory and destiny meet in every line.
To name a fellow artist in the open is to recognise without reservation. In his words, Tran Luu Hau affirmed Boi Tran not only as a painter, but as a presence through which art is preserved, lived, and shared.
Boi Tran Garden was privileged to welcome a delegation of Singapore’s cultural leaders for a quiet afternoon of art, memory, and shared heritage. Over paintings, ancestral cuisine, and warm conversation, what unfolded was more than a visit; it was a gentle affirmation that beauty, when offered with sincerity, becomes a lasting connection.
Where silence becomes form and longing takes colour. Femme au Lotus (Lady with Lotus), Boi Tran’s luminous painting, graces the cover of For The One I Long For (Cho Người Tôi Thương Nhớ) by poet Tran Ninh Ho. In this rare meeting of brush and verse, two kindred spirits of Vietnamese art recall, quietly and tenderly, what love leaves behind.
In Boi Tran’s world, women remember, flowers grieve, and colour becomes memory. Her art blooms quietly, rooted in loss, yet radiant with grace. “She has grown accustomed to finding joy in the midst of fatigue,” she once said. And from that quiet strength, her beauty endures.
Boi Tran, with a sensible heart and the gifted talent of an artist, fully perceives the artistic and literary beauty of nature that comes right out from her magnificent garden and then conveys that beauty most aesthetically to her works.