Article Number: 3826
Hard Cover, German / English, Thread Stitching, 224 Pages, 2025, Kunsthaus Bregenz (KUB)
Danh Võ

Phung Vo: 2 Fevrier, 1861

€ 385.00

In Danh Vos's installation arrangements of objects, photographs, documents, artifacts and souvenirs, the private meets the public, his own biography on political history, original on copy. This book accompanying Danh Vo’s solo exhibition at the Kunsthaus Bregenz pays homage to the artist’s father, Phung Vo, and his contributions to his son’s projects. Together with “Dahn Vo 2004-2012,” this volume constitutes a Danh Vo catalogue raisonne.

Danh Vo’s practice elucidates latent meaning embedded in objects and texts as well as the malleable nature of identity, melding private narratives with global political histories. For Das Beste oder Nichts (2010), Vo appropriated the Mercedes-Benz engine from a car owned by his father Phung Vo, a Vietnamese refugee who had fled the country by boat with his family, became lost at sea, and immigrated to Denmark after being picked up by a Danish commercial ship. Borrowing the work’s title from the car company’s logo, the artist wryly comments on what constituted success for his family once assimilated in Europe. For 2.2.1861 (2009–), the artist asked his father, who is a skilled calligrapher, to transcribe the last communication from the French Catholic Saint Théophane Vénard to his own father before his execution for proselytizing in Vietnam. Repeatedly writing the work by hand, Phung Vo mails a copy of the letter to each of the work’s collectors, in a gesture that narrates a wider history of displacement and the vagaries of communicating across cultures. Lot 20. Two Kennedy Administration Cabinet Room Chairs (2013) investigates a dark chapter in American history as it intersects with the artist’s biography. The cascading leather fragments affixed to the wall were torn from the upholstery of chairs that once furnished John F. Kennedy’s cabinet room, which Vo acquired from a Sotheby’s auction of possessions belonging to the late Robert McNamara, former defense secretary for both Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson, and a driving force behind American involvement in the Vietnam War.