The Sky is Not Sacred (video)

No Longer Available

Completed

2019

Medium

Digital video with sound

Dimensions

7 minutes, 58 seconds

Description

The Sky Is Not Sacred is a single channel video and large triptych painting created in collaboration between Lien Truong and Hồng-Ân Trương. The artists drew from the declassified documents on Operation Popeye, a CIA operation using weather modification as a weapon during the American Southeast Asian military campaign. Planes dropped seeding agent into clouds, initiated rainfall and extended the monsoon season, making vehicular travel impossible over terrain. The large triptych painting transforms the rudimentary cloud diagrams from the declassified documents into a lurid, red landscape. Three ominous clouds take form over a vast landscape, the painting’s hard edges, structure and uncanny color are used to agitate natural observations between sky and water. In the video, footage taken from war planes in the sky during the American military campaign in Việt Nam chronicles the perspectives of fighter pilots, and is juxtaposed with a narrative by John Constable, the 19th century British painter whose keen observations of the sky and clouds established a distinct landscape painting practice. Constable’s text professes an authentic reverence to the sky, suggesting the idealization of nature and science as an aesthetic epistemology. Together, image and text concede in admiration and awe, to the sky’s stature as a sublime, horrifying space. The Sky Is Not Sacred suggests the tension between the aesthetic and the political, and asserts the way in which Western ideologies have violently impacted the Vietnamese landscape, and more broadly, how they have shaped our cultural and emotional relationship to landscape as an imaginary space.

About this Artist

Hồng-Ân Trương & Lien Truong

Hồng-Ân Trương uses photography, video, and sound to explore immigrant, refugee, and decolonial narratives and subjectivities. Her work has been shown in group exhibitions at the ICP (NY), the Nasher Museum of Art (Durham, NC), The Kitchen (NY), Nhà Sàn (Hanoi), the Irish Museum of Modern Art (Dublin), the Phillips Collection (Washington D.C), and the Museum of Modern Art (NY). Her work was included in the New Orleans triennial Prospect.4 in 2018. She was a Guggenheim Fellow in 2019-2020, the Capp St. Artist in Residence at the Wattis Institute for Contemporary Art in 2020, and a MacDowell Residency Fellow in 2022. Her writing has appeared in the Brooklyn Rail, Shifter Magazine, and most recently in Best! Letters from Asian Americans in the Arts, published by Paper Monument in 2021, and in American Art in Asia: Artistic Practice and Theoretical Divergence, edited by Michelle Lim and Kyunghee Pyun, published by Routledge in…
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