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Artist: Aung Kyaw Htet
Aung Kyaw Htet (born 1965 in Myaungmya, Myanmar) is a Burmese painter whose works reflect a quietly profound engagement with Buddhist life and the everyday moments of spiritual practice.
Growing up in a small village in Myanmar’s delta region, Aung Kyaw Htet was shaped early on by his rural surroundings and the rhythms of monastic life. He later attended the State School of Fine Arts, Yangon and studied under masters such as U Thukha and U Aung Moe.
His art often centres on novices, monks and nuns—not simply as symbolic figures, but as individuals whose humanity and inner world he seeks to capture. He pares back extraneous detail so that the viewer’s attention rests on expressions, light, and the relationship between figure and space.
Working primarily in oil and charcoal, Aung Kyaw Htet’s palette tends to be subdued and reflective rather than flamboyant, creating an atmosphere of stillness and meditation even when the subject is a scene of ritual or daily communal life.
His works have been shown across Southeast Asia and beyond—Bangkok, Singapore, Hong Kong, Taiwan, New York—and are held in the collections of institutions such as the National Museum of Myanmar and the National Art Gallery of Malaysia.
In short, Aung Kyaw Htet stands out for his tender and contemplative vision—rooted in tradition yet resonant with a contemporary aesthetic—that invites viewers to pause, reflect and enter into the quiet spaces of his subjects’ lives.
copyright : atomicartspace(2024)
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