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Start:
Feb 7, 2004 at 12 a.m.
End:
May 1, 2004 at 12 a.m.
Event Category:

BLUE MEMORY: Paintings by Tran Trong Vu

Tran’s striking paintings of schematic figures on suspended sheets of plastic explore what it means to be Asian and Vietnamese within the context of an increasingly westernized global culture. His paintings are peopled by androgynous Asian figures against a backdrop of the signs of a modernized Hanoi (like cameras, Western toilets and street signs). Generic Asian male and female figures are painted on life-size sheets of plastic; a material found everywhere in the streets of Hanoi. Suspended from the ceiling, the paintings fill the space and form a labyrinth through which the viewer must walk. The figures hold cameras to their faces or are framed by televisions, products associated with contemporary Asia. Sometimes they are surrounded by slogans that Tran has drawn from banners in Hanoi or by fragments of his father’s poetry. Tran’s work explores both the westernization of Vietnamese daily life and the way Vietnamese culture is viewed by the West. Tran’s work contrasts markedly with more sanctioned, romanticized paintings by Vietnamese artists.

About the Artist

Tran Trong Vu was born in Hanoi in 1964, the youngest son of Tran Dan, one of the best known dissident writers of the 1950s. Tran graduated first in his class at the Hanoi School of Fine Arts in 1987 and in 1989 won a scholarship to study painting at the Ecole Nationale des Beaux-Arts in Paris. Tran now lives and works in Paris.

Gallery Guide Essay
Click here for complete gallery guide essay .

Exhibition Tour
After the premiere of the exhibition at the ASU Art Museum, this exhibition will be available for touring to other institutions. Tour information.

Presentation
Organized by Heather Lineberry, BLUE MEMORY: Paintings by TRAN TRONG VU will be installed in the ASU Art Museum’s Nelson Fine Arts Center location.

Duration
BLUE MEMORY: Paintings by TRAN TRONG VU (February 7 – May 1, 2004) is open at the Nelson Fine Arts Center: Tuesday from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. and Wednesday through Saturday from 10am to 5pm.

Support
The exhibition and related programs are supported in part by Friends of the ASU Art Museum.

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