An interview with Mr. Vann Nath:
One of
only two artists who survived the Khmer Rouge
- I
interviewed Mr. Vann Nath at his home in Phnom Penh.
- Amit May
- April 1, 1997
-
-
Amit May: I appreciate the opportunity to speak
with you personally. Yesterday I visited the
concentration camp of Tuol Sleng (now Cambodias holocaust museum) and saw your large
canvas paintings there, depicting the torture and treatment of the Khmer Rouge on the
captives. It must not have been easy to paint
those works.
Vann Nath: No, it was very difficult. I was asked to do so because there are so few
visual records of what went on inside. I
actually stopped painting after I was released, and only resumed painting in the last few
years. My hands still tremble on occasion
from the torture.
AM:
What was the
situation like inside Tuol Sleng?
VN:
As you
have heard, it was unimaginable
a hell on earth.
The torture was relentless. All
forms of physical abuse. Tuol Sleng was the
concentration camp for all the countrys intellectuals, artists and men of letter. If you wore glasses you were considered an
intellectual and put there. Most of the
prisoners there were killed.
AM:
So you were one
of the lucky few?
VN:
I am only
one of two artists who survived. Everyone
else was killed. Today there are only young
artists in the country, except for me and one other.
I survived because the prison guards discovered that I could paint portraits
of Pol Pot for the administration. I painted
as best I could, making them realistic as they liked.
They then asked me to make bigger portraits.
Soon I was not being abused, but used to make these portraits. They saved my life.
AM:
Lets focus
on your art. Tell me about your past as an
artist. Where you were born and where you
studied fine art?
VN:
I was born
in Battambang, a northern province in Cambodia. In
1959 I started fine art studies at a regional school.
Although Phnom Penh was far away, we were also influenced by the French
painters who visited the area during the French occupation of Cambodia.
AM:
What did you do
after graduating from art school?
VN:
I started
working professionally as an artist. I
painted sets for films and also had my own little gallery where I painted portraits on
commission.
AM:
You mentioned
the French; were you trained in the French impressionist style? What was your style then?
VN:
Yes, we
were trained in impressionism, and I enjoyed painting, especially rural scenery that way. Of course the portraits were painted in a realist
manner.
AM:
What have your
activities been recently regarding painting?
VN:
Besides
the special pieces I created for the Tuol Sleng museum, I have been painting casually,
mostly for friends and relatives.
AM:
What type of works are they? Are any
political in nature.
VN:
No, they
are non-political. I dont have energy
for that. I prefer to paint from my childhood
memories, the rural scenery and other things beautiful from my past.
AM:
What is the
climate like for artists now in Cambodia?
VN:
It is very
bad. Our legacy of artists was killed off and
it left a large void. There are not many
resources for artists, and little interest among the public. Only tourists and foreign businessmen seem to buy
paintings.
AM:
Do you think
this will change?
VN:
I think it
will change slowly. There are more people
like you taking an interest, and also the government has relaxed some censorship. The government is trying to encourage tourism,
which will help artists support themselves by selling their art.
AM:
What do you plan
to do with your art career in the future?
VN:
I would
like to paint more, to set up an art center which will help young artists learn about our
past art. As things improve I can put more
energy into what I love, and that is to paint.
AM:
Thank you, I
wish you and the Cambodian people the best in these regards. |