2017年5月23日星期二

Tiffany Chung


Tiffany Chung (born 1969) is a Vietnamese American multimedia artist based in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. Tiffany Chung's work spans both space and time representing a range of urban spaces at different moments in time, sometimes simultaneously She is known for the diversity of her art practice, as well as the deep research that informs each piece, and the critical lens applied to socio-political issues

Tiffany Chung was born in Da Nang, Vietnam She is considered to be part of the Vietnamese diaspora Her family emigrated to the United States after the Vietnam War She studied art in California earning a Bachelor of Fine Arts from California State University, Long Beach and a Master of Fine Arts in Studio Art from the University of California, Santa Barbara In 2000, she returned to Vietnam to establish her art practice and contribute to the growing community of contemporary artists

She is best known for her "embroidered canvas maps, cartographic drawings, videos, performance work, and installations" Her artwork is held in the following public art collections: Orange County Museum of Art, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Fukuoka Asian Art Museum (Fukuoka, Japan), Queensland Art Gallery (Brisbane, Australia), Singapore Art Museum, and the Sharjah Art Foundation, (Sharjah, United Arab Emirates)

Tiffany Chung’s delicately painted and embroidered maps possess a beauty completely at odds with the horrendous realities they represent. Superimposing maps from different historical periods, the artist interweaves geography with history to revisit sites of cultural trauma. Her investigations often lead back to colonial times, when today’s contested borders were drawn up by foreign powers. Chung’s resulting works chart the destruction and recovery of war-struck areas, for which she regularly predicts possible futures. This interweaving of fact and speculation undermines the apparent objectivity of cartographical maps to remind the viewer that, as philosopher Alfred Korzybski famously put it in 1931, “the map is not the territory.”

In 2007, Chung co-founded the non-profit art space Sàn Art (Ho Chi Minh City) along with Dinh Q Lê and Tuan Andrew Nguyen and Phunam Thuc Ha of the Propeller Group

Works:
"Archaeology Project for Future Remembrance" (2013):
In 2013, Chung had another exhibition at Galerie Quynh in Hochiminh City called "Archaeology Project for Future Remembrance" This project reflects on the 657-hectare master-planned new urban area in Ho Chi Minh City over Saigon river

Six Lines of Flight (2012):
Chung was featured in the San Francisco Museum of Art's Six Lines of Flight: Shifting Geographies in Contemporary Art, as one of several artists from six cities with "burgeoning art scenes" The "Six Lines of Flight" depicts the map of San Francisco in the year 1906 According to her, the 1906 fire in San Francisco is one of the most important 20th century events A map represents not just a border for cities and various people, but a depiction of events that affect a group of people These cities reflect the expansion of art in beyond the global centers of New York City, Paris, London, or Los Angeles, and included Beirut, Lebanon, Cali; Cluj-Napoca, Ho Chi Minh City, Tangier, and San Francisco

Stored in a jar: monsoon, drowning fish, color of water, and the floating world (2011):
In 2011, Chung was one of 63 artists from 30 countries included in the Singapore Biennale, titled "Open House" Her contribution, stored in a jar: monsoon, drowning fish, color of water, and the floating world was a mixed media-installation, "a miniature model of a floating town" based upon scenes of floating communities of the Mekong Delta and Srinagar, India, and Japan According to Weng:

Questioning and reassessing a failed utopian vision--the Arcology design movement, which aimed to minimize human impact on natural resources while enabling extremely high population density--Chung proposes new ways of adapting vernacular structures to address environmental issues and to reshape the present and future global landscape"

Play (2008):
Play is a photo series representing Vietnamese female students and an anomalous "Bubble Shooter" on Northern Vietnamese roads, is featured in the book, Contemporary Photography in Asia According to the book: "Referencing images of the heroic working class found in North Vietnamese socialist propaganda paintings, the Play series explores the unlikely relationship between contemporary youth culture and socialist ideology Play attempts to question the relevancy of past ideology within the context of new utopian visions and pop culture obsessed youths It examines the slippages between Vietnam's wartime rhetoric and its present shift towards consumer culture"
https://hisour.com/artist/tiffany-chung/

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