A multimedia exhibition on the false beliefs of the practice of Chinese medicine in Vietnam.
‘Empty Forest’ by Tuấn Andrew Nguyễn – a solo exhibition showcasing film, sculpture, photography and performance – revealing a landscape where the industry of ailing spiritual beliefs is feeding the most wretched of human desires, to irreversible effect.
For this premiere showcase, Tuấn Andrew Nguyễn will transform the ground floor main hall into a menagerie of animalistic forms, a kind of large-scale diorama where the voice of the endangered sits on the edge of extinction (or in particular case has already teetered into oblivion). In ‘Empty Forest’, Nguyễn explores the impact of traditional medicine in Vietnam on the plight of such wondrous creatures as the pangolin, rhino, turtle and deer, fascinated by the role and shape of human spiritual belief in its once interdependently respectful, yet now destructive relationship with the natural world. Nguyễn’s forest is a supernatural landscape of inanimate objects, perhaps likened as monuments to the undead, where these creatures are transmogrified into totems for the (soon to be) dismembered. The horn of the rhino; the antlers of the deer; the scales of the pangolin, the shell of the turtle – these are just a few of the deemed ‘magical’ elements within traditional medicine practice in China and Vietnam. Despite the fact that usage of such animal parts are scientifically proven as merely placebos, illegal poachers continue to ply the dying populations of these endangered animals knowing that they can earn an impressive sum from ‘patients’ endemically believing in the healing science of ‘faith’. It is to the ritual of consuming these beliefs that Nguyễn is ultimately perplexed and compelled, drawn to the performativity of adoration in the handling of these near mythical creatures (ie. the snake dance; the cock-fight; the pangolin hunt), something he explores by creating a specific dance performance replete with sculptural costume that recalls the lion-dance rituals of ushering in good luck across much of the Asian region.
‘Empty Forest’ dives into the psychological and historical realm of this supernaturalism where Nguyễn continues his signature style of fictionalized dialog inter-cut with documentary footage and ‘found’ landscape, taking us on a journey into the presentday ‘wilderness’ of Vietnam, where the wild is a juncture between the original and its copy; between the living and the extinct; between the imagined and what remains. Via sculpture and moving images we see adoration for animal life that is at once awe and lust, where their environments, for those alive or represented (ie. embalmed or enshrined) reveal long-practiced, complex human ritual.
‘Empty Forest’ is the second phase of an ongoing body of research and work titled ‘My Ailing Beliefs Can Cure Your Wretched Desires’ by Tuấn Andrew Nguyễn.
Tuấn Andrew Nguyễn (b. 1976, Saigon) graduated from the Fine Arts program of the University of California, Irvine, in 1999 and received his Masters of Fine arts from The California Institute of the Arts in 2004. His solo practice explores the body as site, exploring the metaphysical impact of social enigma and mass media on its representation and function. In his desire to re-align the power dynamics between public space and mass media, he founded ‘The Propeller Group’ in 2006, an art collective who position themselves as advertising company and archeologists of historical conundrums. Accolades for project of this collective include the Internationale Kurztfilmtage Wintherthur (Switzerland, 2015) and a Creative Capital award (USA, 2015). The Propeller Group has been featured in numerous international exhibitions including ‘The Ungovernables’ (New Museum Triennial, 2012); ‘Made in LA’ (Los Angeles Biennial, 2012), ‘Prospect 3’ (New Orleans Triennial, 2014), and the Venice Biennale 2015. Tuấn’s practice has been shown in numerous exhibitions and film festivals globally, with his art in prominent public collections such as The Queensland Gallery of Modern Art (Australia), Carre d’Art (France), Museum of Modern Art (USA) and the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum (USA). He lives and works in Ho Chi Minh City.
The exhibition will open on 09 Dec 2017 and be on display until 07 Feb 2018 at The Factory Contemporary Arts Centre, 15 Nguyen U Di, Thao Dien, District 2.
For this premiere showcase, Tuấn Andrew Nguyễn will transform the ground floor main hall into a menagerie of animalistic forms, a kind of large-scale diorama where the voice of the endangered sits on the edge of extinction (or in particular case has already teetered into oblivion). In ‘Empty Forest’, Nguyễn explores the impact of traditional medicine in Vietnam on the plight of such wondrous creatures as the pangolin, rhino, turtle and deer, fascinated by the role and shape of human spiritual belief in its once interdependently respectful, yet now destructive relationship with the natural world. Nguyễn’s forest is a supernatural landscape of inanimate objects, perhaps likened as monuments to the undead, where these creatures are transmogrified into totems for the (soon to be) dismembered. The horn of the rhino; the antlers of the deer; the scales of the pangolin, the shell of the turtle – these are just a few of the deemed ‘magical’ elements within traditional medicine practice in China and Vietnam. Despite the fact that usage of such animal parts are scientifically proven as merely placebos, illegal poachers continue to ply the dying populations of these endangered animals knowing that they can earn an impressive sum from ‘patients’ endemically believing in the healing science of ‘faith’. It is to the ritual of consuming these beliefs that Nguyễn is ultimately perplexed and compelled, drawn to the performativity of adoration in the handling of these near mythical creatures (ie. the snake dance; the cock-fight; the pangolin hunt), something he explores by creating a specific dance performance replete with sculptural costume that recalls the lion-dance rituals of ushering in good luck across much of the Asian region.
‘Empty Forest’ dives into the psychological and historical realm of this supernaturalism where Nguyễn continues his signature style of fictionalized dialog inter-cut with documentary footage and ‘found’ landscape, taking us on a journey into the presentday ‘wilderness’ of Vietnam, where the wild is a juncture between the original and its copy; between the living and the extinct; between the imagined and what remains. Via sculpture and moving images we see adoration for animal life that is at once awe and lust, where their environments, for those alive or represented (ie. embalmed or enshrined) reveal long-practiced, complex human ritual.
‘Empty Forest’ is the second phase of an ongoing body of research and work titled ‘My Ailing Beliefs Can Cure Your Wretched Desires’ by Tuấn Andrew Nguyễn.
Tuấn Andrew Nguyễn (b. 1976, Saigon) graduated from the Fine Arts program of the University of California, Irvine, in 1999 and received his Masters of Fine arts from The California Institute of the Arts in 2004. His solo practice explores the body as site, exploring the metaphysical impact of social enigma and mass media on its representation and function. In his desire to re-align the power dynamics between public space and mass media, he founded ‘The Propeller Group’ in 2006, an art collective who position themselves as advertising company and archeologists of historical conundrums. Accolades for project of this collective include the Internationale Kurztfilmtage Wintherthur (Switzerland, 2015) and a Creative Capital award (USA, 2015). The Propeller Group has been featured in numerous international exhibitions including ‘The Ungovernables’ (New Museum Triennial, 2012); ‘Made in LA’ (Los Angeles Biennial, 2012), ‘Prospect 3’ (New Orleans Triennial, 2014), and the Venice Biennale 2015. Tuấn’s practice has been shown in numerous exhibitions and film festivals globally, with his art in prominent public collections such as The Queensland Gallery of Modern Art (Australia), Carre d’Art (France), Museum of Modern Art (USA) and the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum (USA). He lives and works in Ho Chi Minh City.
The exhibition will open on 09 Dec 2017 and be on display until 07 Feb 2018 at The Factory Contemporary Arts Centre, 15 Nguyen U Di, Thao Dien, District 2.
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