I'd have to say most of the paintings I saw looked a bit like the velvet Elvis paintings one sees at street corners in U.S. cities.

Admittedly, I didn't go in any galleries and most of these paintings were for sale at stalls outside the temples and along the highways... But, they were hanging alongside batik, weaving, wood carvings, ceramics, rubbings of the temple reliefs and other folk art that made me wish I had a container to ship things home in rather than my medium-sized suitcase that had to weigh in under 50 pounds.
We wondered if the Cambodian painters had been misled by tourists who lacked taste. But then I thought about the Khmer Rouge. Pol Pot and his colleagues did their best to rid Cambodia of fine artists during the genocide in the 1970s. It stands to reason that skill in painting would have been lost to at least a generation because of the death of those who would have been teachers.
Nevertheless, one painting stood out.
I saw it in a floating market on Lake Tonle Sap next to the charts showing the array of fish and bird species that inhabit the lake, not far from the fish farm and the tables where tourists drink fresh coconut milk before they get back on the boats that will take them back to shore. There hangs a painting in which a B-52 (I checked the silhouette against photos of U.S. war planes) flies over the lake while people go about their daily activities.

I knew the United States dropped bombs on Cambodia when it wasn't supposed to, but I didn't know why. I am reading Kenton Clymer's Troubled Relations: The United States and Cambodia since 1870 to try to understand why the United States bombed Cambodia during the Vietnam war, or the American War as it is called in Vietnam and Cambodia.
I will let you know if I understand any better after reading an expert.
Cambodia has had a few years of peace, now. I hope that the peace continues without any foreign bombers or home-grown horror. I hope this man, and other artists like him, will have the luxury of painting in oils.










