Works by Sandrine Llouquet, Nguyen Kim To Lan, Nguyen Phuong Linh and Genevieve Erin O'Brien. All 4 female artists are based in Vietnam. That these artists share a common gender is relevant primarily to underscore the lack of serious exhibitions featuring women artists.
curated by Mai Ardia
Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam – Galerie Quynh is pleased to present Half of the Sky – an
exhibition curated by Mai Ardia of work by Sandrine Llouquet, Nguyen Kim To Lan, Nguyen
Phuong Linh and Genevieve Erin O’Brien. All four female artists are based in Vietnam.
That these artists share a common gender is relevant primarily to underscore the lack of
serious exhibitions featuring women artists. The four artists, in fact, possess diverse
practices, disparate concerns, aesthetics and sensibilities. Communicated through drawing,
sculpture, video and animation, the works range from the personal and poetic to the detached
and visceral.
Suspended near the entrance to the gallery and visible from the street, Nguyen Phuong
Linh’s Allergy hangs like women’s lingerie in a boutique. Comprising over six kilograms of
shiny nails, the work glistens seductively through the glass. The outward facing heads of
the nails create an armor-like effect suggesting a fighting warrior while simultaneously, the
sharp, inner facing points suggest the burden and torment of the wearer. Consistent with
much of her past work, Allergy celebrates the beauty of the feminine form as well as its
strength and frailty.
Juxtaposed with Nguyen Phuong Linh’s sensual armor as if decorating a boudoir, Nguyen
Kim To Lan’s Chinese ink on ‘do’ paper drawings entitled six pieces (pornography) depict a
very unusual composition in this traditional medium. Her delicate, crumpled, black lacy
underwear appears to float in the air. Splatters of jarring gold paint suggest a defacement or
violation of the subject. It is unclear whether these ravages are caused by male or female
intervention. Power and protection seem to play shifting roles with the private and the
confessional.
The photos of Genevieve Erin O’Brien negotiate the nebulous territory between public and
private spaces, creating a voyeuristic experience for viewers. Having recently returned to
Vietnam, O’Brien is acutely aware of her foreign gaze on her mother’s homeland. What
appear as innocuous images to the local Vietnamese are charged with profound meaning to
the artist and other ‘outsiders’ to the local landscape. History, memory, power and
objectification are layered in these ubiquitous images in Vietnam. O’Brien’s mixed cultural
background also informs the video Capsized in which “a Queer narrative of US-Vietnamese
relations” is imagined. A Vietnamese woman, clad in the traditional ao dai, lands at China
Beach in a small boat with an American Naval woman officer, bringing to mind a time of war
and a return to one’s homeland. The two women, representing their respective countries,
transform the geo-political relationship between the two nations into the context of human
engagement. The ocean becomes a liminal space where aspects of gender, class, race and
nationality are explored through the subtle treatment of human relationships.
Less personal in subject matter, Sandrine Llouquet’s work is also more ambiguous. In a
darkened corner of the gallery illuminated by small tubes of neon lights, Llouquet has installed
a suite of drawings behind plexiglass that are oddly evocative of bathroom mirrors found in
public toilets. The artist captures the cold, aseptic feeling these environments possess – an
almost supernatural atmosphere is suggested. We stare into these ‘mirrors’ and meditate on
both the negative space of the dull off-white and light hospital green paper and the peculiar
images that appear to comprise a disjointed narrative. Llouquet leads us into a realm of
strange and distressing scenes and then withdraws quietly, leaving us looking into our minds
and imagination for a conclusion to her tales. Loneliness, danger and threat pervade – we
are abandoned into a void and staring at ourselves. The artist’s animations, too, are
unsettling but on a more visceral level – sound is used both to disrupt and soothe. More
graphic and economical in execution than the drawings on display, they are gentle and violent
as well as perversely humorous.
This exhibition offers a glimpse at the practice of four women who represent a cross section
of female artists active in Vietnam. Curiously, the majority of serious contemporary art
galleries in Vietnam are run by women, yet there are scant exhibitions featuring work by
female artists. While certainly in this day and age it is common knowledge that women do
indeed hold up half the sky, this exhibition is a small attempt to clear away some of the clouds
obscuring the female half.
Mai Ardia (English); Huynh Kim Yen (Vietnamese)
tel/fax: +84 8 3836 8019
info@galeriequynh.co
Opening Reception Saturday, the 7th of November from 6-8pm
Galerie Quynh
65 De Tham Street District 1 Ho Chi Minh City
Gallery Hours: Tues - Sat, 10 AM - 6 PM
Closed on Sundays and Mondays
free admission