Artist Talk: Sat, Sept 27 at 2pm

Past Present: Resurfacing: a solo exhibition of woodwork, sculpture and painting by An Ngoc Pham
o
n view through November 1, 2014

curated and presented by Topaz Arts
viewings by appointment: please email visit@topazarts.org

Artist Talk: An Ngoc Pham in conversation with Chương-Đài Võ
Saturday, September 27 at 2pm

Topaz Arts has invited independent curator Chuong-Dai Vo to have a dialogue with the artist whose solo exhibition is currently on view.  Hear about the artist’s remarkable journey surviving the war in Vietnam to his influences of working with major figures in the artworld and his current artmaking practices.

The solo exhibition of woodwork, sculpture and painting by An Ngoc Pham features a 25-year span of works created in New York City. As a result of this Artist Talk, read the essay by Chương-Đài Võ.

The Past is a Journey
by Chương-Đài Võ

An Ngọc Phạm grew up in Biên Hòa, near a major military air base during the Vietnam War. He heard artillery fire on a daily basis. When the sounds ceased in 1975, the silence was disquieting and he could not sleep.

He escaped from the country as a boat refugee in 1979, and settled in New York City. He left with his sister, but somewhere across the ocean she died.

He has returned to Vietnam twice to visit family. The past is a difficult journey.

Previously trained in ceramics at Cao Đẳng Mỹ Thuật Trang Trí Đồng Nai [Dong Nai College of Art and Design], Phạm studied painting at Pratt Institute and honed his carpentry skills working for artists such as Richard Artschwager, Donald Judd and Dan Flavin.

For his solo exhibition at TOPAZ ARTS, Phạm presents nine paintings and sculptures from the 1990s and 2010s. A retrospective spanning twenty-five years, the exhibition showcases his mastery of wood as material and subject—as a metonymy for Vietnam’s long history of colonialism, war and hybrid influences. His use of wood is also a subtle appropriation of minimalism as a language with which to critique American and European power, as manifested in the politics of war and contemporary art.

The early oil paintings show the influence of Vietnamese expressionism in the flattening of space, the decorative patterns and the figurative representations. While the repetition of the lotus in “Floating World” (1992) creates an idyllic, otherworldly landscape, the repetition of camouflage foliage in “Sister’s Life” (1991) alludes to the destructive costs of war borne by civilians, in this case the millions of women who became sex workers during and after the war.

Phạm set “Sister’s Life” in a new bamboo frame, connecting it visually to the more recent bas relief sculptures that are shaped like paintings. As a narrative device in the exhibition, the frame provides a motif with which we can trace the paths of material and socio-political histories that the artist engages with.

Repetition creates a mediating element, a stable entryway through which the artist explores the violence of war. The U.S.-led invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq are the subject of “Flags” (2009-2014), which comprises twenty-two rectangular wooden sculptures lined up like soldiers. The sculptures of U.S. and British flags look like the military coffins that bear the bodies of soldiers killed at war, the coffins that the U.S. government no longer permits news outlets to show back home. While the clean lines and repetition of form point to the strong influence of minimalism, the seemingly faded palette and common woods gesture toward the decline of U.S. power—in international politics and contemporary art. Whereas Judd was criticized for not engaging with the U.S. involvement in Vietnam, Phạm comments on its recurring imperial logic in the Middle East.

Wood as a witness to centuries of Chinese and French history in Vietnam is the subject of “Shadow on the Great Hall of the People (2012) and “Indochine Chair” (2012-2013). Commonplace pieces of furniture, the chairs reveal the imprint of colonial invasions in the curved back, the armrests and the Chinese characters. As with the other works, these bas relief, painting-like sculptures remind us that art and its materials come out of a long history of conquest as well as innovation and renewal.


Chương-Đài Võ is an independent curator and writer based in Southern California. Her research and curatorial interests focus on decolonial aesthetics, diaspora, war, assemblage, and alternative practices. Her curatorial projects include Far from Indochine, a Curatorial Opportunity Program selection currently on view at New Art Center; On the Streets, an apexart Franchise Program selection that take took place in Phnom Penh; and the forthcoming An Aesthetics of Slowness, a Curatorial Programs selection at Dorsky Gallery. She has received fellowships and grants from Asian Cultural Council, Fulbright Program, Mellon Foundation, National Endowment for the Humanities, and University of California Pacific Rim Research Program, among others.

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