Trương Hiếu

b. 1939, Hanoi

Trương Hiếu (born as Trương Văn Hiếu in 1939, Hanoi) studied at the Vietnam Fine Art College from 1955-58. In 1977, he attended the Hanoi Fine Art University and graduated in 1982. He volunteered to join the People’s Army of Vietnam (also known as the North Vietnamese Army) in 1965, shortly after he married, since all the young men of his age were joining. The army sent his unit down the Hồ Chí Minh trail to the south of Vietnam, where his main role was in logistics, building roads and bridges for the following combat units. Since he was constantly on the move and often in enemy territory, he had no further communication with his wife or family until after the war ended in 1975.

In 1968, during the Tết Offensive, Hiếu was based in Củ Chi, the area to the west of Saigon where communist forces ran their operations from a network of underground tunnels. He created many artworks during this period, often under difficult or life-threatening conditions. In one of his simplest yet most impactful art works, US Bell Iroquois UH1D “Huey” helicopters fly overhead, on a search and destroy mission for North Vietnamese soldiers. Hiếu had to lie disguised in the long grass, while he sketched a quick portrayal of the helicopters, using just a few strokes of Chinese ink on paper. Although the sketch required speed and simplicity, it conveys the feeling of the moment by stripping it down to the bare essentials of Hiếu’s experience.

(Biography provided by Witness Collection)

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