Age, Biography and Wiki

Paw Oo Thet (Paw Oo) was born on 1936 in Mandalay, British Burma, is a Burmese painter (1936–1993). Discover Paw Oo Thet's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is he in this year and how he spends money? Also learn how he earned most of networth at the age of 57 years old?

Popular As Paw Oo
Occupation N/A
Age 57 years old
Zodiac Sign
Born 1936, 1936
Birthday 1936
Birthplace Mandalay, British Burma
Date of death 1993
Died Place Mandalay, Myanmar
Nationality Burma

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 1936. He is a member of famous painter with the age 57 years old group.

Paw Oo Thet Height, Weight & Measurements

At 57 years old, Paw Oo Thet height not available right now. We will update Paw Oo Thet's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.

Physical Status
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Dating & Relationship status

He is currently single. He is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about He's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, He has no children.

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Paw Oo Thet Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Paw Oo Thet worth at the age of 57 years old? Paw Oo Thet’s income source is mostly from being a successful painter. He is from Burma. We have estimated Paw Oo Thet's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2024 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2024 Under Review
Net Worth in 2023 Pending
Salary in 2023 Under Review
House Not Available
Cars Not Available
Source of Income painter

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Timeline

1902

Comic-strip painting was not new to Burma, and Ba Gyan (1902–1953), had earlier won the highest award in Burma for artistic accomplishment, the Alinga Kyaw Zwa, for his cartoon work, poking fun at the pompous and vulnerable side of human nature and sometimes political in nature.

This history and taste for cartoon gave artists in Burma the inspiration to explore cartoon art as a serious form of expression.

Paw Oo Thet's second genre was his free-standing watercolor paintings, sold to private collectors, to be framed and hung in homes or offies.

These paintings borrowed much from Dong Kingman with their bold vibrant colors, but not often of Kingman's fluid composition.

Many of these paintings were done in a geometric format, semi-cubist in style, and it seems that Paw Oo Thet's largest inspiration here came from his training in modernistic painting and design from Kin Maung (Bank).

The paintings were often of market or village scenes or squeezed arrangements of temples, the last typical of some of Kin Maung's oil work.

Paw Oo Thet's taste for cartoon passed over into this work also, as one of the singular marks in these watercolor paintings are the wide, exaggerated comic grins on the faces of figures.

These cheerful paintings had many fans among Burmese, and they sold at a price which could be afforded by middle-class Burmese.

These may be called Paw Oo Thet's commercial work, his bread and butter.

It is said of these paintings that his nephew, the tapestry artist Sein Myint, would copy Paw Oo Thet's paintings, and sometimes Sein Myint completed the copy before the original was done.

Paw Oo Thet himself differentiated between his commercial work, often executed tortuously and tediously, and his serious painting, inspired by deeper creative impulses, which flowed freely and unconsciously.

He regarded himself as an expressionist painter.

And it is in this third genre that his most serious work was done, usually in oil.

But it is very difficult to describe this work with an ism, for once the inspiration began, the outcome of the painting was fairly unpredictable.

In this genre, he did family and group portraits, self-portraits, landscapes, work inspired by Burmese traditions or Bagan mural painting, one entirely non-figurative abstract painting, as well as other work.

1908

He and Win Pe, both born in the same year, studied under Ba Thet, who sent the two young artists to Kin Maung (Bank) (c. 1908−83) to learn about modernistic, more abstract art trends.

Both Paw Oo Thet and Win Pe embraced such trends.

1921

However, Aung Khin (1921–1996), the Mandalay painter, had exhibited modernistic paintings more than a decade earlier, but Aung Khin's work did not catch fire or initiate a movement.

1936

Paw Oo Thet was born in 1936 in Mandalay, son of an artist who taught art in a public school.

He lost his mother when he was young, and was brought up by his father, who taught him to draw and paint.

At the age of twelve, shortly after the end of World War II, he lost his right hand while playing with a hand grenade and was forced to learn to write and draw with his left hand.

As a school student, he won many prizes in art competitions and participated in some exhibitions, but he did not acquire an education beyond high school.

All of these works can be found in Ma Thanegi's Paw Oo Thett (1936–1993), His Life and His Creativity and some of them in Andrew Ranard's Burmese Painting: A Linear and Lateral History.

1959

He won a scholarship in 1959 that let him and Win Pe undertake Norman Rockwell's correspondence course, the Famous Artists School, in the United States.

The exposure to the work of Dong Kingman, the Chinese-American watercolorist, often described as an impressionist and who was one of the instructors of the Famous Artists School, influenced both Paw Oo Thet and Win Pe in a large way.

In the case of Paw Oo Thet, Kingman's influence carried over in Paw Oo Thet's vibrant use of color, which was a refreshing change in Burmese arts for much Burmese painting until then was characterized by somber and subdued coloring, and in oil painting, heavy and dark use of chiaroscuro, acquired from the style of Ba Nyan.

Paw Oo Thet's oeuvre possesses four or five genres, or styles.

First, there were his light-hearted strip cartoons which he published in magazines; in fact, he became the founder of a popular comic strip, Gali, published in Mandalay.

1960

He and Win Pe would leave Mandalay for Rangoon in the early 1960s where they teamed up with Kin Maung Yin, the leader of the group, in the pursuit of Modernist ideas and held many exhibitions among the diplomatic community.

By the age of twenty-one, Paw Oo Thet was earning enough to make a living from his art as an illustrator and cartoonist in local magazines and newspapers, including the People's Daily in Mandalay, The Mirror, and the Working People’s Daily in Yangon.

It is often said that this show kicked off the 1960s modernistic movement in Burma.

1963

Paw Oo Thet's acquired a large reputation in Burma when his first one-man show, sponsored by the Burma-America Institute, an arm of the USIS, opened in Rangoon on November 22, 1963, the day of John F. Kennedy's assassination, and all the paintings sold out.

1967

Some of his outstanding paintings in this genre are Three Blind Men (date unknown and documented only in a black and white photo), Self-Portrait in Robes (1967), Soldier Playing Guitar (1976), Royal Game Hunt (1974), Buddha and the Five Disciples (1971), Family (1979) (with much influence of Henry Moore and done in several versions), Portrait of his Father U Hla Gyi (1967), Marionette Duo (1974) and Expecting Mother (1974) (of his wife).

A last genre of Paw Oo Thet are the works he did on commission to illustrate stories in magazines, book covers, and texts of books such as The Orange-Robed Boy, written in English by Patricia Wallace Garlan and Marjarene Dunstan (1967).

In this book, 21 of his watercolor illustrations lavished the text.

His commissioned work for books such as this or for the writings of other authors, oddly, seem to be some of his most imaginatively inspired watercolor.

In The Orange-Robed Boy, Kingman's influence of a free and open composition sometimes appeared, but if the text was in Burmese and the theme he was illustrating was of a strong traditional bent, he might reach back to the techniques of Traditional painting to do the works.

1974

Later, Paw Oo Thet painted watercolors to raise money for a UNICEF funding campaign, The images for the paintings, Asian Harbor Scene (1974) and Market (1975), were used for diaries, stamps and greeting cards.

His illustrations were also used for a literacy campaign, supported by the United Nations and the Burmese Government, and for several educational books.

1993

Paw Oo Thet (ပေါ်ဦးသက်, ; 1936 – 13 April 1993) was a Burmese painter, prominent in the Mandalay art scene who became one of the initiators of a modernistic art movement in Burma in the early 1960s.