In a long series of works he has used Vietnam's complex history as a starting point and created 'alternative histories' and 'memorial projects'. He refers to the past and fills a gap where the official histories are distorted or erased. Since 2001 he has produced a series of four films recorded in water. In addition to the two video works, he will also produce a new installation on site.
Jun Nguyen-Hatsushiba is a Vietnam-based artist who works with film,
photography, conceptual objects and installations. In a long series of
works he has used Vietnam’s complex history as a starting point and
created “alternative histories†and “memorial projectsâ€. Since 2001 he has
produced a series of four films recorded in water.
In Memorial Project Nha Trang, Vietnam: Towards the Complex – For the
Courageous, the Curious and the Cowards, his first film and one of two
being shown at Malmö Konsthall, cyclo (bicycle taxi) drivers resolutely
pedal across the Vietnamese seabed. The title of the film is a tribute to
the millions of boat people who entrusted their faith to the waves – a
venture which cost many of them their life. Through the effort and
willpower invested by these young men in moving their vehicles along
underwater the artist mirrors the suffering and struggle for survival
which has plagued the Vietnamese people both during and after the war with
the United States.
The use of metaphor is typical of Jun Nguyen-Hatsushiba, and the water in
his films acts as a filter between us – the viewers – and the events
captured by the camera. This allows him to experiment with levels of
reality. The cyclo is just one of a number of recurring metaphors in his
art and has been used in several works even before Memorial Project Nha
Trang. One example is Seats for Sale (1998), a collection of colourful and
attractive seats designed for one of Vietnam’s poorest job categories in
the new market economy.
Historical events are often the subject of Jun Nguyen-Hatsushiba’s art. He
refers to the past and fills a gap where our official histories are
distorted or erased. But just as history leads to the present, his work
also leads us to consider the issues and problems which characterise our
lives. Through metaphors and symbols we as visitors to the exhibition are
exhorted to consider issues of globalisation, relations between nations
and individuals, and the social implications of economic development.
These issues not only constitute Jun Nguyen-Hatsushiba’s art but also much
of his life. He was born in Tokyo in 1968, the son of a Vietnamese father
and Japanese mother. He spent the first ten years of his life in Vietnam
and Japan before his father and he, like many others, moved to the United
States. He stayed there until 1994, when he graduated from the Maryland
Institute College of Art. Today he is once again based in Vietnam and Ho
Chi Minh City.
In addition to the two video works, he will also produce a new
installation on site at Malmö Konsthall. In recent years, Jun
Nguyen-Hatsushiba has had solo exhibitions at venues including: the Mori
Art Museum in Tokyo (2004), the MACRO Museo d’Arte Contemporanea Roma
(2003),
the New Museum of Contemporary Art in New York (2003), and has
participated in the 1 Moscow Biennale of Contemporary Art (2005), the 2004
Shanghai Biennale, the 8th Istanbul Biennial (2003), the 50th Venice
Biennale (2003), the 13th Biennale of Sydney (2002), the 25th Sao Paulo
Biennial (2002), and the Yokohama Triennial 2001 in Japan.
Image: Jun Nguyen-Hatsushiba, Memorial Project Nha Trang, Vietnam: Towards the Complex – For the Courageous, the Curious and the Cowards, 2001
For the exhibition at Malmö Konsthall a richly illustrated catalogue will
be produced featuring texts by Dan Cameron and others.
Members of the press are cordially invited to a preview at Malmö Konsthall
Thursday, March 3 at 11 a.m.
Together with the artist, director Lars Grambye will introduce the
exhibition.
Opening Friday March 4, 7-9 p.m.
Lena Leeb-Lundberg +46 40 34 12 94 or +46 708 34 12 94
Next exhibition:
Susan Philipsz
April 30 – August 21 2005
In her first solo exhibition in the Nordic countries, Susan Philipsz makes
use of every cubic centimetre of space in Malmö Konsthall. Philipsz works
primarily with sound, and in her art she explores the emotional and
communicative qualities of sound and song, but also their purely physical
properties. At the beginning of her career she worked mainly with
sculpture, but became increasingly fascinated by the sculptural qualities
of sound and its ability to define space. Susan Philipsz was born in
Glasgow, studied in Dundee and Ulster and is currently based in Berlin.
She is producing a new work for her exhibition at Malmö Konsthall and will
make the gallery visible in a way which we have never before experienced.
Malmo Konsthall
S:t Johannesgatan 7 Box 17 127 SE-200 10
Malmo