Saigon is the city known for the unexplainable languidness that possessed the “French and American” Europeans that lived in Vietnam. At night, in front of a drink, the memories of flowery young girls in their traditional costumes surrounded by the thick smells of the ngoc man, the feverish sounds of the city's motion piercing through the humid heat of the Asian nights hauntingly reappear. A city of contrasts, Saigon has lived through dramatic changes: the turbulence of the South for which it was renowned was replaced by the terrible coldness of the North and the joyfulness of the city was imposed a rigid doctrine. Saigon became Ho Chi Minh and a new city was created. But although appearances may change, people remain the same. So what came of these changes? A few red flags… and a number of Japanese motorbikes.
Rio de Janeiro
Ingo Latotzki, Klaus H. Carl
bookPrague
Klaus H. Carl
bookReflexionen über Dubai
Klaus H. Carl
bookArt History Gothic art
Victoria Charles, Klaus H. Carl
bookAthen
Klaus H. Carl
bookRéflexions sur Dubaï
Klaus H. Carl
bookArt History Baroque art
Klaus H. Carl, Victoria Charles
bookArt History The Viennese Secession
Klaus H. Carl, Victoria Charles
bookRio de Janeiro
Ingo Latotzki, Klaus H. Carl
bookHistoire de l'art L'art gothique
Victoria Charles, Klaus H. Carl
bookArt History Rococo
Klaus H. Carl, Victoria Charles
bookArt History Romanesque art
Victoria Charles, Klaus H. Carl
book