Vietnamese
artists to join Singapore
Biennale 2013
Two Vietnamese curators and nine artists
will be presenting their works at Singapore Biennale 2013 (SB2013)
– an international platform established in 2006 to foster artist presentation
and discourse in contemporary art - from 26 October 2013 to 16 February 2014.
A work by Tran Tuan.
The Vietnamese representatives at the event include:
curators Tran Luong and Nguyen Nhu Huy and artists Lam Hieu Thuan, Le
Brothers, Nguyen Huy An, Nguyen Oanh Phi Phi, Nguyen Thi Hoai Tho, Nguyen
Trinh Thi, Tran Tuan, Uu Dam Tran Nguyen and Vu Hong Ninh.
Vu Hong Ninh, 31, is a sculptor in Hanoi. Vu seeks to make critical
observations about tendencies in human behavior in relation to societal
values and modes of operation. Selected exhibition include ‘Boom Boom’, Hue
Festival, Vietnam (2010);
‘LimDim’, Stenersen Museum, Oslo, Norway (2009); ‘Recovery’, Saigon Open City
Project, Vietnam
(2007).
Lam Hieu Thuan, 40, is a documentary photographer who
lives and works in Ho Chi Minh City,
Vietnam. His
works touch upon social, cultural and political gaps between the past and the
present.
Le Brothers, 38, from Quang Binh, are twin brothers
whose work dissect and question the post-war consciousness of North and South Vietnam.
Selected projects include ‘The Bridge II’, performance at DMZ Gang Hwa, Korea (2012), ‘Before ‘86’, Cheongju
Complex Cultural Center, Korea
(2012) and ‘Communicate with me’, Saigon Open City, Vietnam
(2006).
Nguyen Huy An, 31, from Hanoi, seeks to make connections between
pessimistic psyches of human behavior and the psychology that induces an
obsession with memory. Selected exhibitions include ‘Sky Line with Flying
People’, Hanoi, Vietnam
(2012); ‘LIMDIM’, Oslo, Norway (2009) and “Sneaky Week Festival
Performance”, Hanoi, Vietnam (2007).
Nguyen Thi Hoai Tho, 30, from Hanoi,
is a founding member of CHAAP collective which features the works of young
experimental artists in Hanoi.
Central to the artist’s practice is an interrogation of the female body and
form in the context of patriarchal societies. Selected exhibitions include
‘Phap Phong’, Goethe Institute, Hanoi
(2011).
Nguyen Oanh Phi Phi, 34, a Vietnamese American who
lives and works between Vietnam
and Madrid
and utilizes the medium of Vietnamese lacquer as a painting medium to convey
concepts of memory and reflexivity. Phi Phi received her BFA at Parsons
School of Design (2002) and a MFA at the University of Madrid
Complutense (2012). In 2004, she received a
Fullbright Grant to study lacquer painting in Hanoi, Vietnam.
A work by Vu Hong Ninh.
Nguyen Tran Nam,
34, from Hanoi,
is a multi-disciplinary artist who explores through his works an
interrogation into the human psyche and modes of behavior and interaction.
Nguyen’s works often employ humor as a tool to further expound on the
reciprocal influence between human and nature. Selected exhibitions include
‘Hinterland’, Luggage Store Gallery, San Francisco
(2012); ‘Gap’, Nhasan Studio, Hanoi, Vietnam (2010); ‘Indefinitely’, Ryllega
Gallery, Hanoi, Vietnam (2008).
Nguyen Trinh Thi, 40, is a Hanoi-based independent
filmmaker and video artist and is the founder and director of DOCLAB, an
independent center for documentary film and video art in Hanoi. Her practice is vested in the
exploration of memory in order to unveil hidden, displaced or misinterpreted
histories as well as an in-depth examination of the position and role of
artists in Vietnamese society today. Select exhibitions include Women in
Between: Asian Women Artists 1984-2012, Fukuoka
Asia Art
Museum, Okinawa Prefectural Art Museum,
Tochigi Prefecture Art Museum of Fine Arts, Mie
Prefectural Art Museum, Japan
(2012); The City in Art, Goethe Institute, Hanoi
(2010); No Soul for Sale 2, Tate Modern, London (2012).
Tran Tuan, 32, from Hue city, negotiates between present day
narratives and the inherited realities of the past in order to engage with
concepts of mediation and reconciliation. Select exhibitions include
Transformed Cloud, Hue City Commission (2012); Nặng bồng nhẹ tếch, Festival
Hue (2010); Dialogue, Goethe Institute, Hanoi
(2004).
Born four years before the end of the Vietnam War, Uu
Dam Tran Nguyen, 42, studied in Vietnam
and later earned his BA and MFA in the USA. Tran Nguyen’s transnational
experiences are reflected in his rich body of works including choreographed
performance video, sculptures, drawings, sound installations, buttons pins,
and world flags painted condoms. Never content with a single theme, Tran
Nguyen is a visual spokesman for several contemporary topics from religions
to sexuality, power, identity, and the Internet. His works are in several
collections in Italy, USA, and Vietnam and have been reviewed in
Art Forum, NY Times, LA Times, T.O.N.Y., SGTT, and more.
Hanoi’s artist
and curator Tran Luong, 53, graduated from the Hanoi Fine Arts Institute in
1983. Tran Luong was the founder and Director of the Contemporary Art Centre
in Hanoi from
2000-2003. He has also participated in numerous local and international
exhibitions. These included Flying Circus Project (Singapore 2000), Imagined
Workshop: The 2nd Fukuoka Asian Art Triennial (Fukuoka 2002), Liverpool
Biennial of Contemporary Art 2002 at Jump Ship Rat, Busan Biennale (2004) .
Tran Luong has participated in a number of workshops including MoMA, East
Asian Museum Professionals (New York City & Los Angeles 2001), Visual Art
Workshop of Hanoi Artists at MaoKhe (Quang Ninh 2001) and Civitella Ranieri
Workshop (Perugia 2001) and has received a number of grants from The Asian
Cultural Council, The Ford Foundation and Andy Warhol Foundation for Visual
Arts.
A graduate of the Ho Chi Minh City University of Fine
Arts, Nguyen Nhu Huy has worked with various mediums from installation art to
paintings, photography, video art and public art. He's also is an independent
curator, critical writer, and a poet. He has written, translated and
published widely on Vietnam Contemporary art, culture, and art theory. Huy
often focuses on the ambiguous spaces located in the gap between past and
present, public and private, what we see and what we know, what can be spoken
about and what can only be shown, etc... His art projects take relational
aesthetics as their theoretical and practical departure, always trying to
create the platforms where audience and artist, art and everyday life, can
encounter each other in many different forms of dialogue.
This year’s Biennale is focused on harnessing the
energy of the Southeast Asia region to build
a distinctive Asian identity for itself. Through a bold collaborative
curatorial model that combines the expertise and specialized knowledge of 27
curators from across Southeast Asia, the total of 82 artists have been
identified by the curators, including nine from Vietnam.
T.
Van, VietNamNet Bridge
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