Nổ Cái Bùm in Huế and Đà Lạt
Art as Non-Structural Mitigation in Central Vietnam
By Bùi Kim Đĩnh
Lê Lan Anh, ‘Âm’, 2019, videostill. Image courtesy of the artist.
Hoàng Anh, ‘Vô Đề (Untitled)’, 2020, mixed media. Image courtesy of the artist.
Standing on this structure, NCB in Huế was made up of artworks, performances and presentations of 56 artists between 4 and 9 July 2020. Without any curatorial frame, participating artists tailored their own shows with each other. This organisational structure might have lacked professionalism but artist Đào Tùng noted that it offered an expansive space for liberal minds. In spite of lacking a legal body, the art week received material and and other types of contribution from a number of artists and private donors in the whole country including the Japan Foundation2, which enabled it to move forward.
Artist Nguyễn Đức Đạt drawing the NBC (2020) event map. Image courtesy of NCB(2020).
Under these conditions, the art week rolled into all possible corners to transform them into art. Artist Nguyễn Văn Hè’s Mazda 1200 from 1966 of artist was used for the performance piece ‘Trước giờ khai mạc’ (Before Opening) by Hoàng Ngọc Tú. In the form of a loudspeaker installed in a car, the pre-opening turned the old car into a mobile art space cruising around the touristic citadel to boisterously announce NCB 20203. Using exactly the same propaganda instrument as the government, the satirical performance made it past the censoring gaze throughout the programme.
Regarding the serious watch of Huê’s cultural officials, NCB navigated itself flexibly through difficulties. The authorities’ seriousness could be seen in their careful scan of artworks’ contents and their attendance at all art events. During the artist talk by Nguyễn Trinh Thi, cultural security forces rushed in because of an extra screening. Without permission, the authorities threatened the artists to charge 40 million Đồng (or about USD1.735) as penalty and demanded to destroy the movie. The idea of the movie’s destruction could only be assumed as the authorities’ permanent belief in analogue films before the digital era.Lêna Bùi, ‘Sơ đồ cá nhân #1 (Personal Map)’, 2020, ink and watercolor on paper. Image courtesy of the artist.
Nguyễn Đức Đạt & Laurent Serpe, ‘Nghệ thuật Vạn Tuế! (Art Forever!)’, 2020, before burning view. Image courtesy of Yatender.
Nguyễn Đức Đạt & Laurent Serpe, ‘Nghệ thuật Vạn Tuế! (Art Forever!)’, 2020, burning view. Image courtesy of Laurent Serpe.
This non-structural mitigation, indeed, helped the art week get through not only the censorship, but also some particular obstacles caused by the city’s character. Like dancing in a line, NCB executed the steps rhythmically with any hindrance appearing. Being part of the vanished Republic of Vietnam, Huế contains in itself thick layers of hidden history including the cruel battle in 1968 known as Mậu Thân Massacre or Tết Offensive that resulted in thousands of unjust deaths.6 Preserving many traditions related to those kinds of incidents, a fear of another world and a belief in wandering vengeful spirits is entrenched in the local culture.7
In NCB 2020, the fear appeared in facing the installation ‘Nghệ Thuật Vạn Tuế!’ (Art Forever!) by artists Nguyễn Đức Đạt and Laurent Serpe. The object installation performance was inspired from the widely seen worshipping and votive offerings in town. Coming from this area, the artists found these customs touching. Besides, the market for the dead offered everything except art supplies. Within two weeks, an artist studio was built from colour paper, papier-mâché and cardboard. The craftsmanship was not made by casual craftsmen because of high-cost restrictions, but rather for want of a lesser quality. The artists specified that the votive offerings must be real as it would be truly needed in another world. Thinking in English, the work ‘Art Forever!’ is a tease on what comes next after ‘Art Now’ – a trendy name for books on contemporary art. Likewise in Vietnamese, ‘Nghệ Thuật Vạn Tuế’ is a play on common political slogans in the country. All of these offerings and objects were set up for a week and burnt on the ground of Hue College of Arts on the final day of the art week. Before burning them, the artist and friends brought in fruits, flowers and burnt the incense for worshipping. Đạt was sentimental as he reflected on other deceased artist friends and his own mortality as the objects vanished in the fire. The artist shared that “it was fun to do something invaluable and nonsensical” when speaking about the non-commercial artwork.8
Quốc Thành, Phan Đông Thái, ‘Tăng Xông (Sauna/Tension)’, 2020, performance. Image courtesy of the artist
Nevertheless, the fear of ghosts belonged not only to the folks but also the authorities. After crashing the artist talk of Nguyễn Trinh Thi, Huế’s authorities asked NCB’s organizers whether the name of the art week was related to the battle Mậu Thân in Huế. Although the massacre is unwritten in the country, its vivid stories are engraved in the collective memory, including the authorities’. The curator said the historical event was uninvolved for she was but a young girl when it happened and that she simply meant for it to mean a jolly explosion of art. This answer helped her to leave the casual interrogation unscathed. At the same time, the scale of the art week resulted in a warning issued for raising funds abroad by the Saigon police before her departure to France for study.
Scenario at Mơ Đơ. Image courtesy of Nguyễn Anh Tuấn.