(30 JULY, 2015) HONG KONG-
10 Chancery Lane Gallery is pleased to present FortressTemple, an exhibition of recent
work by Vietnamese artist Bui Cong Khanh, curated by Iola Lenzi, from September 18 -
October 10.
Saigon-based multi-media artist Bui Cong Khanh (b.1972) examines Vietnamese
society and culture from both insider and outsider perspectives. His eye trained on his
country’s social, political and cultural tensions, he scrutinizes these especially alert to
the impact of history and power in shaping Vietnamese contemporary life. Images from
street and traditional culture, emblems and texts of the state, and symbols of religion,
are the building blocks of Khanh’s visual repertoire. Medium is selected according to its
ability to impart additional meaning and elicit sensual response: blue and white
porcelain vessels, textile, performance, video, participative installation, sound, drawing,
and painting are combined to articulate his ideas.
While past works have among other things explored consumer habits, Communist party
propaganda, rural society’s abrupt transformation, corruption, and abuse of power,
starting in 2014, Khanh has turned his interest toward evolving nationalist sentiment as
Vietnam rethinks its place in the world in the twenty-first century. In new and recent
work assembled for 10 Chancery Lane Gallery, Hong Kong, Bui Cong Khanh takes
Vietnam’s ancient and modern colonial histories as starting points for series where the
artist’s personal heritage as a mixed Chinese-Vietnamese is interwoven with current
Vietnamese geo-political anxiety focused on China’s recent manifestation of imperialistic
ambition. Choosing classical blue and white underglaze Chinese porcelain as medium
for its clear reference to China and Vietnam’s shared cultural history, Khanh presents a
three-part ceramics and video installation Fortress Temple 2015. A second work, the
singing and writing performance Hymne National, builds compelling tension through its
contrasting of sensual and poetic form, and its evocation of Vietnam’s still ambiguous
relationship with its French colonial history sixty years after France’s defeat by the
Vietnamese at Dien Bien Phu. A third installation, activated by the audience’s
participation, is Prayer on the Wind. A cloth temple-like structure made from sewn cutout
squares of Burmese monks’ saffron robes inter-dispersed with military camouflage,
the piece boasts a number of pockets on its outer walls into which members of the
public are asked to insert notes inscribed with their prayers, ideas and wishes. Once
these scraps of paper materializing prayers have been stuffed into the piece’s outer
pockets, viewers are invited to lie inside the cloth temple to experience radiant shafts of
coloured light produced as sunshine filters through the installation’s textile fibers. Coopting
the public sensorially through experiential play and direct text-based interaction,
Prayer on the Wind triggers thought about the relationship between different types of
state institutions and the role of religion, faith and the military in power structures.
Originally conceptualised in Myanmar, Prayer on the Wind’s conceptual basis translates
meaningfully to all contexts where citizens question authority’s legitimacy and its modes
of operation.
Visually and materially seductive, technically accomplished, and through participative
strategies, the three works assembled in FortressTemple stimulate viewers to join the
artist in a critical reading of contemporary life and politics. Bui Cong Khanh, one of the
most sophisticated and socially cogent artists working in Vietnam today, in
FortressTemple shows how through virtuously combined materials, conceptual
strategies, and compelling visual cues, art nurtured in one locale and context translates
to other places and time-frames.
FortressTemple is curated by Southeast Asian art specialist Iola Lenzi.
About the artist
Born in 1972 in Danang, Vietnam, Bui Cong Khanh lives and works in Ho Chi Minh City,
Vietnam.
Bui Cong Khanh’s work explores historical and contemporary issues in Vietnam. As one
of the first local artists to gain international recognition during the 1990s with his
performances questioning restrictions of individual expression in communist Vietnam,
Khanh has since embraced painting and sculpture to express his fascination with the
complex history of Vietnam. More recently, his works are reflective of the dichotomy of
his fast changing nation. Deeply philosophical and reactive to the world around him,
Khanh is one of Vietnam’s most intriguing artists.
Bui Cong Khanh’s work is in institutional collections including the Queensland Art
Gallery, Brisbane, the Koc Foundation, Istanbul, and the Singapore Art Museum.
About the curator
Iola Lenzi is a Singapore-based researcher, critic and curator of Southeast Asian art.