Vietnam enters regional tennis championship finals


Bac Ninh: Vietnamese players Le Tien Anh and Vu Tuan Phong have qualified for the Asian tennis championship finals in India in April after winning the championship at the International Tennis Federation (ITF) Asia 14 and Under Development Championship 2024 Regional qualifying – South, Southeast and East Asia.

During the qualifying event that took place from January 7-17 in the northern province of Bac Ninh, Anh won the championship in the boys’ singles event while female player Naba Sishan topped the girls’ singles event.

Anh and Phong won the boys’ double event, while in the girls’ doubles event, A.Diyunuge and S.Arachchi from Sri Lanka got the title.

The tournament featured 28 athletes from seven countries, namely Bhutan, Maldives, Sri Lanka, Mongolia, Cambodia, Brunei, and Vietnam. Vietnam sent five players to the event./.

Source: Vietnam News Agency

Two int’l sports channels broadcast exclusively on MyTV


Hanoi: MyTV platform of the Vietnam Posts and Telecommunications Group (VNPT) on January 16 launched two international exclusive sports channels, SPOTV and SPOTV2.

The channels will provide sports enthusiasts with exclusive access to various international tournaments, including the Grand Prix motorcycle racing (MotoGP), the US Open Tennis Championships (the US Open), the Wimbledon Tennis Championships, the BWF World Tour and BWF Major Events, Golf Major The Open and The Masters, and the World Table Tennis Championships.

The exclusive television channels will also broadcast the Saudi Pro League in the 2024-2025 season which brings together many world-class stars. In addition to football, viewers can enjoy a variety of sports tournaments such as basketball, volleyball, figure skating, and athletics, among others.

MyTV is the top pay-TV service provider in Vietnam with nearly 200 channels and 70,000 hours of Video on Demand (VOD). MyTV offers a diverse content library, making it a prominent player in the nati
onal market.

According to Deputy General Director of VNPT-Media Nguyen Son Hai, the inauguration of SPOTV and SPOTV2 aligns with MyTV’s content strategy and marks a significant milestone as MyTV officially re-introduces international sports channels to its audience after a two-year absence from the Vietnamese market.

Owned by media conglomerate Eclat of the Republic of Korea (RoK), SPOTV and SPOTV2 are currently available in 10 countries and territories in Asia. They are accessible through 14 major PayTV infrastructures, including Astro and TM of Malaysia, True Visions of Thailand, Singtel and StarHub of Singapore, Sky Cable and Cignal of the Philippines, Univision of Mongolia, Macau Cable TV of Macau (China), PCCW of Hong Kong (China), as well as MNC Vision, K.Vision, First, and Useetv of Indonesia, with over 20 million subscribers./.

Source: Vietnam News Agency

Fine arts museum launches new e-ticket system


Hanoi: The Vietnam National Museum of Fine Arts on January 15 launched its new electronic ticket system, making it the first among those in Vietnam deploy e-ticket.

The system is the result of the cooperation project between the museum and the Tourism Information Centre under the Vietnam National Administration of Tourism (VNAT), aiming to create convenience for visitors and tour operators.

With the e-ticket system, visitors will not be required to go to the counter, but can instead purchase tickets online through the national tourism application “Vietnam Tourism – Vietnam Travel” on their smart devices.

The tickets are integrated for use in other places, and a single ticket can be used for all members of a group tour./.

Source: Vietnam News Agency

Two Vietnamese referees to officiate at 2024 Paris Olympics’ third qualifying round


Hanoi: The International Federation of Football Associations (FIFA) has appointed two female referees of Vietnam – Le Thi Ly from Ho Chi Minh City and Ha Thi Phuong from Hai Phong, to work in the third qualifying round of the 2024 Paris Olympics, according to the Vietnam Football Federation (VFF).

Ly as main referee and Phuong as assistant referee will officiate the match between the women’s national football teams of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) and Japan scheduled to take place on February 24 in Pyongyang, the DPRK.

Ly is one of the three female referees acknowledged by FIFA in Vietnam and she concurrently serves as senior referee of the Asian Football Confederation (AFC), who is regularly tasked with officiating in various tournaments and official matches.

In 2023, Ly was appointed to officiate in various football events, including the first qualifying round of AFC U20 Women’s Asian Cup from March 6 -13 in Thailand; the 32nd SEA Games in Cambodia, the second qualifying round of AFC U
20 Women’s Asian Cup in Myanmar, the Southeast Asian U19 Football Championship in Indonesia, Asian Games 19 in Wenzhou (China), the second qualifying round of the 2024 Paris Olympics in China, and the AFC Women’s Club Championship in Chonburi, Thailand./.

Source: Vietnam News Agency

Hanoi harnesses ‘soft power’ of culture in development


Hanoi: Since joining the UNESCO Creative Cities Network in the ‘Design’ category in 2019, Hanoi has organised a multitude of activities relating to design and creativity.

The capital city has participated in the network with the aim of turning cultural resources and creations into the foundation for its sustainable urban development, said Director of the municipal Department of Culture and Sports Do Dinh Hong.

The membership has helped the city set out new objectives for cultural development, inspire creativity and envision its new brand in the international arena, he continued.

Over the past four years, Hanoi has coordinated with relevant sides to launch many creativity-based contests for people from all walks of life, especially youths, which have contributed to its urban construction and sustainable development.

Notably, walking streets, including those around Hoan Kiem Lake in the heart of the capital, the Son Tay ancient citadel, and the Dao Ngoc-Ngu Xa neighbourhood, stand as vital hubs for leisure
and recreation, catering to both tourists and locals.

The city has launched various exhibitions held at the Hanoi Museum, the UNESCO-recognised Thang Long imperial citadel, and the Van Mieu-Quoc Tu Giam (Temple of Literature Complex), and created many cultural and creative spaces such as the digital exhibition marking the 500th death anniversary of Italian painter Raphael (1483-1520), and an exhibition themed ‘Fabric scraps’ displaying artworks made by the disabled.

An outstanding example is the Hanoi Creative Design Festival 2023 held last November with 60 events and activities, which served as a platform for the exchange and display of creative activities in various areas in the city.

Hanoi has always paid attention to international cooperation in this regard as reflected through its organisation of many seminars and workshops on creative cities and cultural industry at home and abroad, as well as its participation in similar events.

The city will launch more creative activities, focusing on its heritag
e elements, to create a foundation for its sustainable development, while stepping up communications work to promote creativity among the public.

The UNESCO Creative Cities Network was created in 2004 to promote cooperation with and among cities that have identified creativity as a strategic factor for sustainable urban development.

Almost 300 cities around the world which currently make up this network work together towards a common objective: placing creativity and cultural industries at the heart of their development plans at the local level and cooperating actively at the international level./.

Source: Vietnam News Agency

“Happy Tet 2024” to open in Hanoi?


Hanoi: The ‘Happy Tet 2024’ programme will be held at the Thang Long imperial citadel in Hanoi from January 24-28 by the Hanoi Promotion Agency (HPA) and the Thang Long-Hanoi Heritage Conservation Centre.

Spanning a total area of 3,500 square metres, the historical site arranges special spaces for Tet celebrations, from the old times to tourist destinations and heritage sites across the country.

Models of trains, age-old houses, Long Bien bridge, Dong Xuan market, Me Linh flower market, and Tet celebrations in the central and southern regions will be erected and re-enacted on the premises of the site.

HPA Deputy Director Nguyen Thi Mai Anh highlighted that the programme is also an opportunity for the capital to intensify trade and tourism promotion while welcoming overseas Vietnamese and international visitors to the city during Tet.

It also serves as a place to connect domestic and foreign enterprises investing in the city as well as to promote cultural values, heritages and showcase high-quality consume
r goods serving people during the traditional new year holiday, she added.

Several activities will also be held during the five-day event, including traditional ‘Banh Trung Day’ (round glutinous rice cake) pounding, incense-making, a photo exhibition on Tet customs from the old times, art performances, a 3-D film screening, and folk games, among others.

According to the HPA’s report, as of December 6, 2023, the capital city had attracted 2.85 billion USD in foreign direct investment (FDI), an increase of 61% year on year. Its total retail sales of consumer goods and services rose by 10.4%./.

Source: Vietnam News Agency

New publication on Vietnamese modern art released


Hanoi: A book by French expert Charlotte Aguttes Reynier on the establishment and development of the Indochina School of Fine Arts has been released in Hanoi.

The book entitled Nghe Thuat Hien Dai Dong Duong (Modern Art in Indochina) is published in French, Vietnamese and English by In Fine editions d’art publisher.

The 432-page book is the fruit of Reynier’s ten years of research and expertise on the genesis of Vietnamese modern art and will celebrate the 100th anniversary of the school this year.

“Publishing in three languages is important,” said Reynier at the book launching recently at the Vi?t Nam Fine Arts University, its precursor the Indochina School of Fine Arts.

“It will help to reach a wider audience, with a trilingual book. The book lifts the veil that was cast over 70 years ago on an entire section of international art history. It bears witness to the way in which the art market enriches art history and contributes to the advancement of this long-forgotten school.”

The Indochina School of Fi
ne Arts (L’Ecole Superieure des Beaux-Arts d’Indochine) was founded in 1924 by the first French principal Victor Tardieu and his Vietnamese colleague artist Nguyen Nam Son.

The school opened admissions with the first class in 1925. The curriculum developed over the years, expanding from oil on canvas to sculpture and lacquer, and from fine arts to architecture and decorative arts.

Besides Tardieu, the school also included permanent staff like Joseph Inguimberty, Alix Aymé and Évariste Jonchère, who succeeded Tardieu as principal upon his passing in 1937. It closed down when the Japanese occupied the country in 1945.

During its 20 years of existence, the school launched numerous artist-pioneers like Le Pho, Mai Trung Thu, Vu Cao Dam, To Ngoc Van, Nguyen Tuong Van, and others.

The book recounts the highlights between 1925 and 1945, and describes the exhibitions organised in Hanoi, Saigon and Paris, as well as how they were received by the critics.

It includes 319 illustrations and 28 biographies of student
s and teachers, as well as multipal archive documents. The author also opens the doors of numerous private collections and museum reserves.

From teachers and students like Inguimberty, Ayme, Dam , Thu and Pho, they drew, painted, sculpted, worked with lacquer, and exhibited.

Directed by Tardieu and then Jonchere, the school experienced rich artistic emulation during the 1925-45, at the origin of the revival of modern Vietnamese art.

In the book Reynier sets out to explain the decisive stages that led to the emergence of the artistic elite envisioned by Tardieu and sheds light on the many grey areas that until now have masked the richness and artistic importance of this period in Indochina.

“The book provides many documents that we have never seen before,” said fine arts researcher Ngo Kim Khoi, artist Nam Son’s maternal grandchild.

“France has very good archives and I hope Reynier’s research will help us better understand fine art that we did not know well before.”

The book provides missing pieces of th
e 100-year history of the school, according to fine arts researcher Nguyen Hai Yen.

“The author has chances to meet the artists’ families in France including Le Pho, Mai Trung Thu, Vu Cao Dam and Le Thi Luu,” she said.

Reynier, an expert in Asian modern art has been president of the Asian Artists in Paris Association (AAP) since 2019. She works with the association to highlight and document various facets of Asian modern arts, and more particularly to list the master works of artists Thu, Pho and Dam.

She has spent the last ten years focusing on the works of artists with dual training in Vietnam/France and China/France. Since 2013, she has paid particular attention to promoting the works of Asian artists.

The book launching ceremony was held by the French Institute of Hanoi, the Vietnam Fine Arts University and the Viet Art View Company.

The book will be distributed in February at a price of 75 EUR, tax included, in France. It can be purchased online at.

Source: Vietnam News Agency