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Nearly 200 archives of the Vietnamese national emblem and the original sketches created by the late painter Bui Trang Chuoc will be displayed at an exhibition themed "Sketches of Vietnam’s national emblem by the late artist Bui Trang Chuoc".
On the occasion of the 75th anniversary of the August Revolution (August 19) and the Vietnamese Independence Day (September 2), the State Records Management and Archives Department in collaboration with the Vietnam Fine Arts Museum will organize an exhibition on the national emblem of Vietnam.
Artist Bui Trang Chuoc was born in 1915 in Hanoi. He graduated from Indochina Fine Art College in 1941. In June 1951 he joined the national emblem designing contest. From 1953 to 1955, artist Bui Trang Chuoc drew 94 draft designs and a dozen of detail versions of objects he wanted to use in the national emblem design.
From those drafts, he made 15 different designs but all followed the same idea. In October 1954, from 300 designs in the contest, 15 designs of artist Bui Trang Chuoc were chosen and reported to the Government.
The number one design had a red background with a golden star, representing the nation's flag; the rising sun symbolized a nation in the East and illustrated the dawn of a new era; the rice flower represented farmers and agriculture while the anvil symbolized workers and industries.
As reported, the archives of Vietnam’s national emblem created by the late artist Bui Trang Chuoc will be displayed at the Vietnam Fine Arts Museum from August 25 to Semtemper 6.
