Le Bich is a seasoned photo reporter who has for many years collaborated with tourist journals such as Wanderlust , Travellive. Vietnam Airlines inflight magazine Heritage. To him, photographing relics has become a natural passion, especially after long ramblings in the countryside, busying himself with village wells and craftsmens tales.
To date, Le Bich has already hoarded a sizable collection and held five personal exhibitions, all on the theme of heritage, including ‘The carriers of the cream of Hanoi’,‘Vietnam’s traditional trade villages’ (in Mozambique), ‘Trade villages in spring’, ‘The soul keepers of mid-autumn’, and most recently, ‘Colors of life’.
The really remarkable quality in Le Bich’s photos is the natural order of the stories behind each and every picture. Hidden in them is the cherished ideal of the photographer-artist dedicated to capture those stories and more in his photos. ‘Without being photographed in the journalistic style, maybe someday nobody will get to know about them.’
A few minutes talking to Le Bich is enough to get an impression of a passionate photographer, very sensitive about simple, small, old things, from the village wells that have become nothing but symbols, to the few remaining artisans who make traditional mid-autumn toys for children, to rustic women in the craftsman workshops, exhausted but oozing life.
Asked why he chose photography, Le Bich said that as a young man, he didn’t love it that much. Having graduated from the University of Foreign Languages, Le Bich worked for a foreign company and moved up to a managerial position. It took quite some time before he finally realized his real destiny. It was even harder to start over again. But then, what is the value that lasts? To him, it was photography.
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