Dương Bích Liên (17 July 1924 – 12 December 1988) was a Vietnamese painter.[1][2] He is reported to have drunk himself to death.[3][4][5] He was a posthumous recipient of the Ho Chi Minh Prize in 2000.
Works
Some of his works are in the Vietnam National Museum of Fine Arts, Hanoi.
- Dương Bích Liên, Portrait of a lady, pastel on paper
References
- ↑ The Country of Memory: Remaking the Past in Late Socialist Vietnam - Page 126 Hue-Tam Ho Tai - 2001 "Like Bui Xuan Phai's streets and Duong Bich Lien's romantic realist scenes, this and other of Nguyen Sang's portraits, with their singular talent for capturing emotions, have been a source of inspiration for the younger generation of painters ..."
- ↑ Painters in Hanoi: an ethnography of Vietnamese art - Page 75 Nora A. Taylor - 2009 "Bui Xuan Phai, Nguyen Sang, Nguyen Tu Nghiem, and Duong Bich Lien were not the most subversive of painters; others, such as Nguyen Sy Ngoc, and the poet Tran Dan, were put into much more strenuous positions vis-avis the political ..."
- ↑ Churchill, Eden and Indo-China, 1951-1955 - Page 202 Nông Văn Dân, 2011 "Despite or because of the known case of Duong Bich Lien, a somewhat established salary man painter from one of the Tonkinese provinces, who starved himself to death in less than three weeks in Hanoi in late 1988, single-mindedly as well ..."
- ↑ Cultural representation in transition, new Vietnamese painting Siam Society - 1996 "Duong Bich Lien was among those sent to the countryside to depict the new socialist work teams, but he produced only a somber landscape entitled "An Afternoon at the Border" It was in this atmosphere that a "new" School of Fine Arts was ..." ...... Nghiem accepted the invitation, but Duong Bich Lien declined, further contributing to his isolation and relative obscurity compared to Phai, Sang, and Nghiem Lien drank himself to death in 1988 the same year in which Phai and Sang died."
- ↑ Art of Vietnam: Catherine Noppe, Jean-François Hubert - 2003 -"... Tran Dinh Tho, V6 Lang and Duong Bich Lien, artists who made a lasting impression on twentieth century Vietnamese art. ... Illness compounded by overdrinking, his response to a world that plotted against him, led to his death in Hanoi in ..."
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