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Williams College Museum of Art Presents
Jun Nguyen-Hatsushiba
Memorial Project Vietnam
June 12–September 6, 2004
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Williamstown,
MA—Williams College Museum of Art (WCMA) is pleased to present Jun
Nguyen-Hatsushiba Memorial Project Vietnam on view in the Media
Field gallery June 12–September 6, 2004. Jun Nguyen-Hatsushiba creates
lyrical, graceful, and spellbinding films that explore Vietnamese history
and identity in a profound manner. The exhibition includes Memorial
Project Nha Trang, Vietnam: Toward the Complex-For the Courageous, the
Curious, and the Cowards (2001) and the most recent work, Happy
New Year-Memorial Project Vietnam II (2003). These two videos are
linked by a common underwater setting, vivid, saturated color, choreographed
movements, and hypnotic soundtracks.
The work of Jun Nguyen-Hatsushiba has drawn international attention since
its first major appearance in the 2001 Yokohama Triennial. Memorial
Project Nha Trang, Vietnam: Toward the Complex-For the Courageous, the
Curious, and the Cowards (2001), his project with Vietnamese cyclo
(bicycle-taxi) drivers and fishermen, has resulted in a poetic merger
of these two traditional modes of work, which are among the most economically
disenfranchised of a country undergoing rapid social transition. In this
video, cyclos, driven by fisherman, slowly race each other along the ocean
floor. The languid motion and arduous progress of the rickshaw-like contraptions
at the bottom of the sea are a compelling symbol for an entire nation
discovering its identity after a half-century of political turmoil. With
direct reference to the impact of the Vietnam War on his country, Nguyen-Hatsushiba's
beautiful camerawork deconstructs the fate of those who are caught between
old and new modes of existence. As the divers strain to hold their breath
long enough to propel their vehicles a few feet farther, additional tension
is created between graceful movement and precarious mortality.
In Happy New Year-Memorial Project Vietnam II (2003), a traditional
New Year's dragon puppet, carried by seven divers, twists and turns beneath
the waves in a dreamy evocation of the pandemonium of street festivals.
The dragon's sinuous movement is contrasted with that of the Fate Machine,
a giant orb that shoots small balls at random intervals toward the water's
surface. As the balls reach the air, they burst into clouds of colored
powder, signifying a sudden release from a state of danger. Like its predecessor,
Happy New Year uses water as a metaphor for Vietnam, from the more literal
reading of a peninsular country with a considerable coastline to the historical
resonance of the "boat people," who fled the country by the
tens of thousands when the war ended in 1975. The adaptation of the Lunar
New Year celebration as the basis for this work is a direct reference
to the 1968 Tet Offensive, which took place in the form of a series of
surprise attacks by North Vietnamese forces during the year's most significant
holiday. In this work, Nguyen-Hatsushiba affirms his position as one of
the most innovative young Southeast Asian artists on the international
scene, and as a forceful interpreter of themes of cultural identity and
its unfolding dialogue with history.
About the Artist
Nguyen-Hatsushiba earned an M.F.A. from the Maryland Institute College
of Art in 1994 following his B.F.A. from the School of the Art Institute
of Chicago in 1992. His work has been included in the Yokohama Triennale
and the Kwangju, Sydney, and São Paolo Biennials. Raised in Japan
and educated in the United States, the artist now lives and works in Ho
Chi Minh City.
Jun Nguyen-Hatsushiba’s Memorial Project
Vietnam is toured by UC Berkeley Art Museum. Generous support
for the production of the exhibition is provided by The Rockefeller Foundation
and the LEF Foundation. Happy New Year-Memorial Project Vietnam II was
produced by the MATRIX Program with assistance from the New Museum, New
York. The MATRIX Program at the UC Berkeley Art Museum is made possible
by the generous endowment gift of Phyllis C. Wattis. Additional donors
to the MATRIX Program include the UAM Council MATRIX Endowment, Ann M.
Hatch, Art Berliner, Christopher Vroom and Illya Szilak, Eric McDougall,
and Glenn and April Bucksbaum.
Publicity Images Available
Publicity images for Jun Nguyen-Hatsushiba Memorial Project Vietnam
and other current exhibitions are available for use. Images include video
stills from Memorial Project Nha Trang, Vietnam: Toward the Complex-For
the Courageous, the Curious, and the Cowards (2001) and Happy
New Year-Memorial Project Vietnam II (2003). They can be found at
www.wcma.org/press. Contact: Suzanne Augugliaro, Public Relations Coordinator
413.597.3178.
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