Home > Vietnam > Saigon Travel News > Better days ahead for HCM City museums? |
Better days ahead for HCM City museums?
Public museums in HCM City attracted around 2.6 million visitors
last year, with the five museums administered by private organisations and
individuals.
But the number remains far short of the potential despite efforts to attract
visitors because the museums have not been modernised.
Authorities have tried to improve the quality of the museum and enhance public
awareness of culture and traditions by organising mobile exhibitions aimed at
students, workers, and rural residents.
Nevertheless, the city branch of the Ho Chi Minh Museum, the War Remnants
Museum, the HCM City Museum, and the Vietnam History Museum are the only ones
out of the 11 in the city that are reasonably interesting.
The lack of interest in the other museums can be attributed to the shortage of
exhibits, boring and shopworn displays, and poor infrastructure and premises.
Hua Ngoc Thuan, Vice Chairman of the municipal People's Committee, said:
"Museums in the city have lots of valuable exhibits but they cannot be
successfully publicised due to a shortage of specialists and facilities."
Indeed, infrastructure at almost all museums fail to measure up to international
specifications.
Uyen Huy, an artist and chairman of the HCM City Fine Arts Association, was
quoted by Sai Gon Giai phong (Liberated Sai Gon) newspaper as saying in most
countries, museums are designed based on several standards including
architecture, materials, aesthetics, and technique as well as premises, colour,
and light. But in Vietnam the common trend is to upgrade available buildings
into museums.
Larger investments should be poured into upgrade of museums since HCM City is
one of the country's major commercial hubs and has the largest number of
museums. But in reality their development has been unplanned and capricious.
Light at the end of the tunnel
In 2011 the municipal People's Committee approved an investment of VND7
billion (US$47,800) to equip seven museums with firefighting and security
systems.
The plan also seeks to add many exhibits to the museums and provide allowances
to their staff.
Three of them – the War Remnants Museum, HCM City Fine Arts Museum, and Ho Chi
Minh Museum – have already been upgraded and expanded under the programme, while
the work is under way at the others.
Under another programme funded by the France Government, two exhibits at the
Vietnam History Museum, on the ancient Oc Eo and the medieval Champa cultures,
have attained contemporary international standards.
They have around 500 precious items that are being publicly displayed for the
first time, including artworks and sculptures made of gold, silver, copper,
gemstone, pottery, wood, and sandstone.
The exhibits follow modern museology norms like choice of exhibits, display
designs, lighting, and graphic design.
Source: VNS |
High Quality Tour Service:
Roy, Spain
Fransesca, Netherlands
A member of Vietnam Travel Promotion Group (VTP Group)
Address: Room 509, 15T2 Building, 18 Tam Trinh Str., Hai Ba Trung District, Hanoi, Vietnam (See map)
Tel: +84.24.62768866 / mail[at]tuanlinhtravel.com
Visited: 1967