Cristina NualART

Tag: San-Art

How to make art with someone else’s artist books

OpenEdit2

OpenEdit3

OpenEdit4

OpenEdit5

OpenEdit6

OpenEdit7

OpenEdit8

OpenEdit1

BookSetSail-Thomas&Tammy-15

DucBalloons


Vietnam was the first country chosen for the radical initiative made possible by the Hong Kong based Asian Art Archive. A selection of the archive’s art books, magazines and catalogues arrived in San Art gallery, Ho Chi Minh City, to be edited by the public, before moving on to other Asian countries for more people to explore the interventions, and add their own.

This interactive proposition may smack of relational art theories, but is actually founded on the ancient Chinese tradition of literati, whereby a painting is not the work of a single individual, rather, it is the work of a scholar. Collector’s seals and calligraphy poems are superimposed on the landscape painting created by the literati. Effectively, this millennia old tradition is a collaborative editing process. With this in mind, publications on contemporary Asian art were given to the people, as a potentially risky, potentially enriching, tactic for engendering collaborative editing.

The exhibition opened in February 2011, and I went to have a play. A few fun hours later I’d produced a number of interventions that intersected existing drawings in my sketchbook with images I found in the books. Tran Minh Duc’s art mural based on maps of HCMC had not taken off yet, but maps and location seemed to be the dominant ideas for me too, helped by fate, recent life anecdotes, and by meeting some architecture students there. See photos of my ‘editions’ on the left.

Lena Bui, also artist in residence, discussed with me her insightful ideas on the conflict of powerful family traditions versus the desire for indepence –and a sex-life- amongst young people in Vietnam. Her slashed and embroidered canvases are cuttingly open about the social dynamics at battle.
LenaBui

A week or so later, I embarked on an educational project, collaborating with an international school and the gallery. Imparting ideas of ripping up books with young children, in a country rife with breaches of copyright, may be a risk, but the challenge held great promise. A small group of children enjoyed the laid-back space and comfy cushions, and created their own versions of images in the books, some of which were assembled into a book that was left on site. Tran Minh Duc, artist in residence, was working on his wall installation inspired by maps of HCMC. In turn, this inspired little Lucio to create a floor installation, complete with train tracks and vehicles. Art is ageless. GIS

Evening events during the duration of the exhibition gathered HCMC art-lovers for more art and ideas sharing. Artist Tammy Nguyen, who the gallery had invited for an editing process of the book ‘A History of Art in 20th Century China’ in collaboration with a writer, involved the public in responding to images from the archive displayed on a big screen. Drawings circulated and were re-edited several times before coming together as pages in a collective book.

The project now moves on. San Art held a closing party this weekend, and Susanna and Linda from the Asian Art Archive collected impressions and feedback, and the edited books, in preparation for the next city that will develop the process. The final hours of Open Edit in HCMC were as alive with ideas as when the initiative opened, but with many ‘edits’ scarred across the pages. Ironically, the closing party was itself edited by government censors, who prohibited a DJ from playing and prevented any improvisations during an artist’s performance. Just before leaving, I was leafing through a book on Ai Weiwei, marred with poignant interventions (I later found out they were cut by artist To Lan Nguyen). We hope the Chinese government opens it’s ‘editorial’ censorship on the living artist.

AiWeiwei

Art start for the year of the cat

Unlike nearby Asian countries that are about to enter the year of the rabbit, Vietnam chooses to start the year of the cat. And Ho Chi Minh City has a mixed bag of art up in its best (and rare) contemporary art spaces.

Craig Thomas Gallery has a group show themed around self-portraiture, with paintings that range from samey to dramatic to humourous.

Catman 1 by Nguyne Quang VinhNguyen Quang Vinh has created his ‘catman’ series at an appropriate time. The cat-morphous faces hold the glory of pop colour and fun, but don’t offer any deep insights into human (or animal) psychology. They’re well painted and amusing to look at once, but don’t pose any questions – other than maybe how saleable a work might be if it repeats tried and tested compositions and ideas a generation later.

Su That Phun Chieu Song Hanh, by Le kinh TaiLe Kinh Tai is being promoted as Vietnam’s enfant terrible, and he does a good job of pumping energy into the local art scene. He too goes for vibrant colours and some humour, but adds street art influences, and heavy texture à la Dubuffet,  to create some messy images that could be hybrids of an Anselm Kiefer and a Keith Haring, if such a genetic experiment could be spliced.

Craig Thomas’s beautiful space is suffused by the muted gazes of Luong Luu Bien and Nguyen Thuy Hang. Buoi Chieu, by Luong Luu BienHe palettes and glazes the paint to develop some serious but not despondent, richly moody group portraits, while she works on producing quiet and calm expressions akin to ‘The Scream’. Venice carnival masks turn mannerist while giving birth. The line begs for a bit more lighthearted fluidity, but this young artist is working on getting something out of her system. If she doesn’t end up waning in self-pity in years to come, she’ll be an interesting one to watch.


Gallery Quynh, for a full 3 months, is showing Nguyen Trung’s new ‘Grey White Black’ series. Trung is one of Vietnam’s original exponents of abstract art, and has experimented much in his 50 years of practice. The press release states that the source of inspiration for this series, apart from formal exploration of monochrome compositions, is the ‘urban fabric of Ho Chi Minh City’. Clearly, fear of censorship or a desire to please/apease the public have omitted a much rawer topic. The paintings are scratched and drawn into with disgustingly disembodied genitalia. Saigon may be grey and rough and itchy with injustices, but it is far from being the dispassionate sexual exchange that appears here. It would be interesting to know if the motivation for euphemistically inventing the city subject matter is one of discreet shame or one of deluded self-indulgence.

Painting by Nguyen Trung

Thankfully San-Art save the month by putting up a joyous group show of gallery artists. Tuan Andrew Nguyen, from The Propeller Group, has carved self-immolating Buddhist monk Thich Quang Duc (d. 1963) into a baseball bat that sits righteously in the center of the show. The sculpture is superbly crafted, but at $10,000 (and it’s an edition of 5!), the pricing is out of place with the rest of the exhibits – and the country’s GDP.

A monument to a monument, by Tuan Andrew Nguyen. Photo © Cristina Nualart

The lightboxes in the background are the work of Tammy Nguyen, who seems to be growing well into her art career since moving to Vietnam from the US. Her embroidered, painted and printed work, most recently in some form of a 3D casing, is wonderful to ponder over, enjoying the overlapping layers of media. It seems to collect together the best of feminist art practices since the 70s, while discussing multicultural concerns in a wholly coherent way.

The founder of San-Art himself, Dinh Q. Le, contributes another bizarre hybrid artwork made a decade ago. The little resin figurines of Lotus Land are cute and toy-like, but their spliced bodies, thankfully much less disturbing that the Chapman brother’s ‘children’, ooze a mysterious sadness.
Lotus Land by Dinh Q. Le. Photo © Cristina Nualart

Nguyen Thai Tuan really takles feelings of unease, with some of the Black Paintings dated 2009. The clean and powerful oil images report a social silence that resonate powerfully in Vietnam, but are graphic enough to be construed as old film stills or political strife in other continents.
Black Painting no. 81 by Nguyen Thai Tuan. Photo © Cristina Nualart
Walking out the little gallery into the sunshine again, you can’t help but smile passing the Juice barrels painted by Bui Cong Khanh. Borrowing again from Pop Art, his works are not sinister, but carry a similar ‘prettified’ social critique as Cheri Samba’s glittery paintings. Both artists make work that appears cheerful and amusing to look at, but adds a spoonful of sugar to some ugly truths. May the year of the cat continue with that colourful glee!

 

 

Unless otherwise specified, text and images © 2012 Cristina Nualart