Prix de la route Mandarine 2026 | Call for Applications

French
Tiếng Việt

On the occasion of the centenary of the École des Beaux-Arts de l’Indochine, Charlotte Aguttes-Reynier, expert, launched in January 2025 in Hanoi a Prize dedicated to supporting and encouraging artistic creativity in Vietnam. At the beginning of September, she announced the call for applications for this competition, named the ‘Prix de la route Mandarine‘, which each year will aim to spotlight two Vietnamese students on the international art market.


Charlotte Aguttes-Reynier, President of the Association of Asian Artists in Paris,
announces the call for applications for the 2026 Prix de la route Mandarine.Paris, September 3, 2025.

“Since the creation of this Prize last January, we have reflected on the reward to offer and also on the name that would best suit such a competition. In the end, we decided to name it the ‘Prix de la route Mandarine’ and chose to facilitate for the laureates access to the international art world. A hundred years ago, Victor Tardieu opened his school in Hanoi at 121 route Mandarine. He welcomed students from all regions of Vietnam, trained them, and then encouraged them to present themselves on the international stage whether in Paris at the Salon des Artistes Français, at the 1937 World’s Fair, or even in Rome, for example.
Today, this Prize, open to Vietnamese students regardless of their city of origin, offers the two winners the opportunity to take a first step into the international art market through a trip to Paris for an exhibition. The Mandarine Road Prize invites every young Vietnamese to set out on their journey and to surpass themselves artistically.”

— Charlotte Aguttes-Reynier, President of the Association of Asian Artists in Paris

Since 2014, Aguttes has shed remarkable light on the work of painters who, in the early 20th century, received a dual Asian and Western education. It was in the amphitheater of the University of Social Sciences and Humanities in Hanoi that Charlotte Aguttes-Reynier, also President of the Association of Asian Artists in Paris, announced on January 7, 2025, her project to create a Prize to support contemporary Vietnamese creativity. Beneath the large restored mural after Victor Tardieu, the first director of the École des Beaux-Arts de l’Indochine, she presented this project, which is now taking shape with a call for applications.
The date of January 7, 2026, in Hanoi is currently ideally envisioned for the jury to announce the names of the two finalists and present them with the ‘Prix de la route Mandarine’.

Le Prix de la route Mandarine : An Immersion into the International Art Market

This Prize is open to any student of the visual arts enrolled in an art school in Vietnam in September 2025 for the 2025–2026 academic year, and is intended to give them a first step onto the international art market. This initiative offers the two laureates the opportunity to each exhibit their awarded work in France, in Neuilly-sur-Seine (Paris). The exhibition will be held in early April, coinciding with one of the two annual moments when Paris celebrates contemporary creation.
With airfare provided, the two winners will be able to attend the opening of the exhibition of their work in Paris. They will also benefit from a program of artistic activities, including meetings with market professionals, visits to museums, and access to must-see events such as current Parisian exhibitions and fairs. In addition, they will receive a grant of €1,000 to support their stay.

The Mandarin Road ?

It was on the Mandarin Road in Hanoi that the School of Fine Arts was established in 1925 for its first academic year.

Although this road has changed names several times, its route dates back to antiquity, and it is known today as Quốc lộ 1, or National Highway 1A. This historic road runs the entire length of Vietnam from north to south, connecting Hanoi to Ho Chi Minh City, passing through Huế, Da Nang, Nha Trang, and many other cities, covering more than 2,300 kilometers.

As early as the medieval dynasties, this main thoroughfare linked the imperial capital (Thăng Long, today’s Hanoi, and later Huế) to the southern provinces. Then called Đường Cái Quan, the “Great Mandarin Road,” it earned its name from the numerous mandarins—civil administrators and scholars—who traveled it for centuries. These officials used the road to reach even the most remote villages.

From 1925 onward, located in the school’s workshops at 121 Mandarin Road, the first students received a multicultural, high-level education designed to enable them to bring about the Renaissance of Modern Vietnamese Art.

We invite you to review the participation guidelines by downloading the application form and the Prize regulations.

The Jury of the 2026 Mandarine Road Prize

Among the jury members are:
The descendants of Victor Tardieu (first director of the School, 1925 - 1937), represented by Nicola Baudo, his great-grandson.
The descendants of Évariste Jonchère (second director of the School, 1938 - 1945), represented by Arnaud Fontani and Florence Fontani-Veron, his great-nephew and great-niece.
Hàn Ngọc Vũ, Vietnamese collector.
Hà Mạnh Thắng, contemporary Vietnamese artist.
Lê Huy Tiếp, contemporary Vietnamese artist.
Charlotte Aguttes-Reynier, President of the Association of Asian Artists in Paris (AAP).

Key Dates
New application deadline: November 7, 2025, at midnight (Hanoi time)****, by email to: routemandarine@aap.art
Submission of works by the candidates: December 30, 2025
Jury deliberation: January 2026 in Hanoi (preferred date)
Exhibition in Paris: April 2026

Discover the AAP Association: Artists of Asia in Paris
Address: 41 rue Charles Laffitte, 92200 Neuilly-sur-Seine, France