If you are asking this level of question, vga text mode is a long long way away from the first thing you should be trying. Although that depends on your platform of course. If this is a raspberry pi, then I would still start with blinking leds and then the uart, then do video if you so desire, video on the raspberry pi is quite trivial. Text mode, there isnt, you have to draw the pixels, but with a little experience with raster based fonts (do this on your x86 machine make bitmaps or print strings of xxes and 00s or something) you can easily come up with a font set and then for each character just draw the pixels.
The language has little to do with it, C or asm work fine, most folks do C and asm only when needed, that is the recommendation I would give as well.
I have many bare metal examples (github.com/dwelch67), one of which for the gba does a little bit of font stuff with an 8x8 font, which you can steal from me I dont care. I have yet to actually do the raspberry pi video stuff, but there are soo many examples, you go through one gyration to get a pointer in the arm address space (And set the video mode, etc) and then it is just a matter of writing pixel data to that memory range and the gpu echos it to the video card.
the beaglebone black or one of the allwinner cards (pcduino, apc.io) (I would avoid those due to lack of documentation) could be used, they have different video interfaces than the raspberry pi, so more work is involved. I have yet to figure out the beaglebone black for bare metal, and have some allwinner info but have not done any real bare metal there. So dont buy unless you know someone else has done it. Actually the early ipods, classi gen 1 - at least 5, the ipod nano gen 1, are not hard to do video with if video is really what you are after. The gameboy advance is pretty easy and there are gazillions of examples and visualboyadvance is a good simulator so you dont really need hardware you can start writing arm code to draw pixels right now.
the hawkboard and pandaboard are also something you might want to look at I think both have video, I have a couple of hawkboards and bare metal is easy, dont have a pandaboard. I have also used a open-rd board, dont remember what it has on it...
If you want a pc like experience with pcie cards that is a lot more work you have to setup the root complex, reset and train the endpoints, configure them, then you can talk to them and depending on the video chip/board determines how much work is involved in even the simplest video task. (if the video card uses system memory then you have to bring that up, if it is ddr then pcie is very trivial compared to bringing up ddr).
start with the game boy advance simulator.
ARM Linux
to see how it's done there.