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Hương Ngô

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Hương Ngô
Ngô in 2022
Born
NationalityAmerican
EducationUniversity of North Carolina
Years active2004–present

Hương Ngô is a Hong-Kong-born artist currently living in Chicago, Illinois. Her art practice is conceptual, research-based, and often takes the form of installation, printmaking, and non-traditional mediums. She received her BFA from University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (2001), and her MFA in Art & Technology Studies from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (2004) and is a graduate of the Whitney Independent Study Program. She is assistant professor at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.

Themes

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Recurring themes in Ngô's work include decoloniality,[1] intersectional feminism,[2] and migration.[3] Her most recent projects examine the history of women involved in the anti-colonial movement of French Indochina.[4] Her work ESCAPE was a public performance.[5] Other projects deal with political surveillance on oppressed populations.[6]

Works

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In her exhibition To Name It Is to See It, at the DePaul Art Museum[7] Ngô used fabric printed with patterns from a historical mural in the Paris Museum of the History of Immigration, combined with primary source material from several archives to comment on the role of women within the anti-colonial movement of French Indochina[8] to reveal the intersectional effects of surveillance in political movements.[citation needed]

A figure who rises to the surface in Ngô's work is Nguyễn Thị Minh Khải (1910-1931), Vietnamese revolutionary and a leader of the Indochinese Communist Party during the 1930s. In her essay, art historian Faye Gleisser writes that Ngô, "makes materially manifest the discursive and collective historical process of ideology formation: the making and unmaking of Nguyễn Thị Minh Khải, the event".[9] In her essay, Document as Event, art historian Nora Taylor writes that "Ngô considers her interventions [in the archives] to be performances of tests through acts of translation."[10]

In the work The Opposite of Looking is Not Invisibility. The Opposite of Yellow is Not Gold, made in collaboration with artist Hồng-Ân Trương, the artists pair vernacular photographs of their mothers with texts from 1970s-era US congressional hearings regarding Vietnamese refugees.[11] In an interview, the artists speak about their process and importance of working with family photographs:

We searched popular visual culture for images of Vietnamese Americans, but it turns out that public visual records have rarely included images of Asian Americans. So, we turned instead to the domestic archive and searched our own family albums for photographs of our mothers working as a way of making our mothers’ labor visible vis-à-vis the racialized body. We realized there was a common vernacular language at play in both of our families, and we began to pair up photographs in which our mothers’ labor had been erased, made hypervisible, or rendered invisible through their embodied performance as the successful refugee or the loving caretaker.[12]

Hương Ngô has exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art as part of New Photography, 2018,[13][14] Prospect 5 Triennial in New Orleans,[15] and the Prague Biennial of 2005.[16] She has exhibited at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, Contemporary Arts Center, Cincinnati, Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art, Kansas City, and the Madison Museum of Contemporary Art.[citation needed]

She is assistant professor at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.[citation needed]

Collections

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Her works are in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art,[17] Smith College,[18] the Walker Art Center,[19] and the Center for Book Arts.[citation needed]

Awards

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  • Illinois Arts Council Fellowship, 2020[20]
  • 3Arts Next Level Award, 2020[21]
  • Camargo Core Fellow, 2018

References

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  1. ^ "Deftly and Defiantly Decolonial". New City Chicago. 27 June 2017. Retrieved 2022-12-18.
  2. ^ "This is what intersectional feminist art looks like". Chicago Tribune. 21 June 2017. Retrieved 2022-12-18.
  3. ^ "Hương Ngô". June 2022. Retrieved 2022-12-18.
  4. ^ "HƯƠNG NGÔ: TO NAME IT IS TO SEE IT". DePaul Art Museum. Retrieved 2022-12-18.
  5. ^ Armitage, John (2011-09-06). Virilio Now: Current Perspectives in Virilio Studies. Cambridge: Wiley. p. 122,134,139. ISBN 9780745648774.
  6. ^ "Art in the Age of Surveillance". Exhibitions on the Cusp. Retrieved 2022-12-18.
  7. ^ "This is what intersectional feminist art looks like". Chicago Tribune. 21 June 2017. Retrieved 2022-12-18.
  8. ^ Perez, Jessica (22 March 2017). "Hương Ngô Interview". Asian American Art Oral History Project. Retrieved 2022-12-18.
  9. ^ "Hương Ngô and the Making and Unmaking of Nguyễn Thị Minh Khải". DePaul University Library. Retrieved 2022-12-18.
  10. ^ Taylor, Nora (Winter 2018). "The Document as Event: Vietnamese Artists' Engagements with History". Art Journal. 77 (4): 70–81. doi:10.1080/00043249.2018.1549878. S2CID 192470230.
  11. ^ "Huong Ngo and Hong-An Truong on their work in "Being: New Photography 2018"". Art Forum. Retrieved 2022-12-18.
  12. ^ "Hương Ngô and Hồng-Ân Trương. The opposite of looking is not invisibility. The opposite of yellow is not gold. 2016". MoMA. 16 March 2018. Retrieved 2022-12-18.
  13. ^ "Museum of Modern Art Announces Artist List for 2018 Edition of 'New Photography'". Artnews. Retrieved 2022-12-18.
  14. ^ "MoMA's Human Focus". Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 2022-12-29.
  15. ^ "PROSPECT NEW ORLEANS ANNOUNCES ARTIST LIST FOR PROSPECT.5". Art Forum. 2 March 2020. Retrieved 2022-12-18.
  16. ^ Vine, Richard (September 2005). "Biennale Gamble: Doubling Down". Art in America. pp. 46–51.
  17. ^ "Hương Ngô". Retrieved 2 March 2023.
  18. ^ "The Voice is an Archive 2016 Hương Ngô American, b. 1979". Smith College. 7 January 2021. Retrieved 2 March 2023.
  19. ^ "Hương Ngô". Walker Art Center. Retrieved 2 March 2023.
  20. ^ "ILLINOIS ARTS COUNCIL AGENCY ANNOUNCES 2020 ARTIST FELLOWSHIP AWARD RECIPIENTS". Illinois Arts Council. Archived from the original on 2023-02-08. Retrieved 2022-12-18.
  21. ^ "Chicago non-profit 3Arts awards $150,000 to three women artists". The Art Newspaper. 19 October 2020. Retrieved 2022-12-18.
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