upcoming exhibition
About
Although Vietnamese artist UuDam Tran Nguyen (b. 1971) has lived in Los Angeles for most of the last two decades, the land of his birth is never far from his work or his thoughts. In those same two decades, Vietnam has, like many contemporary Asian countries, lost an incredible amount of natural and rural landscape. Dramatic economic growth and industrial development continue to replace once-bucolic fields with roads and highways, leveling small agrarian communities to make room for modernist glass and steel skyscrapers.
In response to the overwhelming-at times chaotic and amusing-number of motorbikes that populate Vietnam’s urban streets, Nguyen made the single-channel video Waltz of the Machine Equestrians-The Machine Equestrians (2012). The video's 28 mysterious “equestrians,” connected by thin strings clipped to their brightly colored ponchos, resemble a contemporary band of knights adorned in flimsy armor and pollutant-deterring face masks as they ride in choreographed unison along a Ho Chi Minh City street, the city skyline in the distance. As Russian composer Dmitri Shostakovich’s dense but whimsical Waltz no. 2 plays, the group progresses around softly banking turns and through seemingly endless straightaways with a resolute and theatrical determination. In Waltz of the Machine Equestrians, Nguyen captures duplicitous and ambivalent beauty in the motorbike-riding population’s extraordinarily dancelike and precipitous choreography, the increasing tensions between the individual and the collective, and the paving over of the natural landscape.