Home Event Listings Art HCMC – Exhibition “Khói sóng” by Ha Manh Thang

HCMC – Exhibition “Khói sóng” by Ha Manh Thang

Posted on
0
Ha Manh Thang, In Autumn, 2015, acrylic, oil and charcoal on paper, 54 x 39 cm
Ha Manh Thang, In Autumn, 2015, acrylic, oil and charcoal on paper, 54 x 39 cm

Opening: Fri 25 Sep 2015, 6 pm
Exhibition: 26 Sep – 31 Oct 2015
Galerie Quynh

From the organizer:

Come to “KHÓI SÓNG”, an exhibition of new work by Hanoi-based artist Ha Manh Thang.

“KHÓI SÓNG” reflects the artist’s ongoing engagement with Vietnam’s culture and history and belongs to the larger “Vietnam Landscapes” project (2010 – present), which began with the artist’s observations of some of the country’s most iconic structures and sites and the ideologies and roles they embody. The new work marks a dramatic shift from depicting symbolic, physical structures to pondering the metaphysical question of non-existence. A poetic meditation on the passage of time, memory and place, the paintings speak to viewers about mindfulness and the vicissitudes of life.

The artist states: “According to ancient Vietnamese architectural concepts, lakes, or Shui (Water) have a close connection with the philosophy of Feng-shui. A small pond, a lake, a stream or a river in front of a pagoda or a communal house, the latter seen as a silhouette with its existence in the former, is a common sight. I intended not to give clarity to the surrounding landscape, context and architecture. Instead I drew only the basic structural sketches through a vertical axis. On the top of each vertical structure along the axis, be it a pagoda or a communal house, I pictured its corresponding floor plan. As for the central architecture below, I painted it in the most basic structural format, i.e. cross section, floor plan, or elevation. Below each of these, I painted a different lake, with the silhouette of the pagoda all year round.”

By dividing the canvases into three registers, Ha Manh Thang seems to draw a parallel with the sea, earth and sky. The division between the three realms, however, is at times indistinct, and the mood and atmosphere of natural weather patterns and conditions prevail. In contrast to his previous works, the new paintings are created with heavy impasto and favor a palette of soft pastels. Through the controlled layering of paint, precise etching and the casual presence and disappearance of the stenciled phrase “THIS IS HEAVEN” or “THIS IS NOT HEAVEN”, Ha is engaged in a deliberate act of erasure and restoration – an apt metaphor for our own struggles of self-actualization.

“KHÓI SÓNG” refers to the smoke [‘khói’] on the waves [‘sóng’] in an ocean, lake or other body of water. Alluding to the atmosphere – the sound, humidity, fog, air – on the surface of water, the title is inspired by the 8th century Tang Dynasty poem Lầu Hoàng Hạc or Hoang Hac Temple by Thôi Hiệu. A reflection on the idea of home, Lầu Hoàng Hạc closes with a poignant if melancholic reference to haze on the river.

ABOUT HA MANH THANG:

Born in 1980 in Thai Nguyen Province, Ha Manh Thang is one of Vietnam’s most important young painters. He has been featured alongside acclaimed artists such as Gerhard Richter, Marlene Dumas and Peter Doig in several international publications including “Painting Now” (Thames and Hudson, 2015) and “Painting Today” (Phaidon, 2009). Having graduated from the Hanoi Fine Arts University in 2004, Thang has held a number of notable regional and international exhibitions including Pueblos en Resistencia, 1 Bienal del Sur, Caracas, Venezuela (upcoming: Nov 2015 to Feb 2016); Instruments of Meditation: Works of Art from the Zoltán Bodnár Collection, Reök Palace, Budapest, Hungary; Connect: Kunstzene Vietnam, ifa Galleries, Berlin and Stuttgart, Germany; The rain and the small stream presented by Ernst & Young’s Asean Art Outreach program, Singapore; and Post-Doi Moi: Vietnamese Art After 1990, Singapore Art Museum. Ha Manh Thang currently lives and works in Hanoi.

Galerie Quynh
Level 2, 151/3 Dong Khoi, Dist 1, HCMC
+84 (8) 3836 8019
Gallery hours: Tuesday – Saturday, 10 AM – 6 PM; closed Sundays and Mondays

NO COMMENTS

Leave a Reply