Truc-Anh

Born:
1983
Residence:
Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
Nationality:
French, Vietnamese
Trust:
APT Beijing
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PRESS & PUBLICATIONS

  • “Truc Anh: Vacuphilia,” at Varola. The first exhibition by the Vietnamese-French artist features paintings and installations that feature bodies and body parts inhabiting an abstracted world of black and white. Through Friday. Pacific Design Center, 8687 Melrose Ave., Suite B256, West Hollywood, helenvarola.com.

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  • "Truc-Anh’s pieces from Ink Kingdom strike with the brutal simplicity of black and white, ink and paper. Vivid images like the slightly twisted rib cage of Soul Archive #2 are recognisable objects placed on display and almost challenging the viewer with an inescapable virulent energy. " Alice Bauer

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  •                                                        Truc-Anh is a French artist born in Paris in 1983. His parents left Vietnam 40 years ago. Today, he lives and works in Ho Chi Minh City (Saigon), Vietnam.   Q: Tell us a little bit about your background: who are you? What is your art? My name is Truc-Anh, a Vietnamese (girl) name with a dash, because in France, where I grew up, nobody understood that “Anh” was not my family name. I kept it that way and as my artist name. I started to study art in Paris, France, at the “Ecole Boule”, the National School of Applied Arts. I stopped to become a dancer, I wanted to understand the concept of “total art”. In 2001, however, I finally decided to study at La Cambre, National School of Visual Arts in Brussels, Belgium. In 2006, I was studying at two schools in two different countries... Legally it was forbidden. But I did not want to lose my time. The other school was “L’Ecal” in Lausanne, Switzerland, where I did my postgraduate studies. It was funny and exhausting at the same time, I always had to travel by train between the two cities for the exams with all my work... I did my Bachelor, Master and passed the aggregation for teaching. Today, I teach a little bit of painting La Cambre and keep on teaching in various contexts. Pedagogy is very important to me. I know that talking is an important part of how people receive my work. I create my paintings like enigmas, and not answers. Paintings can not only be the illustration of a concept, but have to erase it. It should not be held by the viewer. Not even by me. I am better at my work when I am “discovering”. If I know where I’m going, I become mediocre. I always try to challenge my brain to let go something about common habits, do painting the opposite way, reverse colors, and push myself to make some mistakes. It’s like.. a little death and a little birth at the same time.   Q: What do you mean by “enigma”? I believe that a painting has to challenge you over the course of time. Today, 90% of images are "ready to think", “prêt-à-penser”. The concept itself has turned into crutches and statements like some slogan. I believe it’s a huge mistake, because the eye of the viewer becomes passive. A piece of art should resist the consumption mechanism.   Q: Where are you right now? I am in Paris because I had an opening last week, at Galerie Sator. It’s a big set up of works of mostly black-and-white paintings called “Friends”, with images of ghosts and creatures I used to imagine when I was a child. I grew up in a big dark house, and I started painting this “appearances” that came to me, even on the wall. I was imagining these creatures would fill the obscure emptiness I was surrounded with. This was my first relationship to art.   ...and you called them “friends”? Yes, because they surrounded me, they were present, they became my friends. I am working on another series called Ghost, which is a photo serie of my "real" friends.. I haven’t published it yet. I finished the set when I wasn’t scared of ghosts anymore. My relationship to them is the foundation of my own mythology. I use my own little history to question a larger history. The history of painting, the history of figuration: how can I make a portrait today? Is it still possible to create something? Of course the answer is yes.   Q: Why did you move to Ho-Chi-Minh City? The main reason was because I wanted to live far away from the Western art scene, I am a very competitive person, but I know it’s not good for my work. It’s very hard to think differently when you are inside the system.   Q: What do you consider as the system? Why the need to get away? In France, there’s a tradition to divide and to set up a hierarchy. Rationality is superior to sensoriality for example. They are very afraid to fall in an excess of emotion, but for me it is the only way to access to sublime. Even if you’re a minimalist, you have to be strongly emotionally committed to your work. The French are afraid to be criticized. And it’s not that I particularly like it, but I am looking for it.   In Belgium, the surrealist's heritage nourishes a lot of the artist into an anti-heroic posture. But I used to be, and I still am, quite the opposite – I always wanted to be a hero. I had the same feelings toward the Neo Geo movement in Switzerland. In my own way, I was always eager to learn and challenge my practice, but at the same, I felt a strong confrontation.   Q: Did your work change since you live in Vietnam? My painting changed not because I am in Vietnam, but because I am a happier person. And it’s not a question about being well or being unwell. I created many works in “pain”, and I consider them good. Art is not always connected to pleasure; it can even be the opposite. It was also important to me that my first exhibition wouldn’t be about Vietnam. I don't want to feed the demand of “exotic” work. I don’t create contemporary installations about the Vietnam War for example, but paintings about personal matters. It’s a political gesture from my side.   Q: Tell us why you joined APT? My gallerist told me that Moti Shniberg, co-founder and Chairman of APT, would like to meet me, and I think it was a big part of why I am part of APT. I have a very “human” relationship with APT. The system is very criticized in France, but I like the risk. I like the challenge of creating new economic models and new channels. And I am also impressed by the fact that someone had the courage to create a company like APT. And through APT, I have the opportunity to be part of projects I wouldn’t necessarily be otherwise.   If you’d like to see Truc-Anh’s work, go to: Jacquoire en Patrioche Solo show at Galerie Sator, Paris, France until Oct 12. www.galeriesator.com   Cult of Anarchy New Delhi Photo Festival, New Dehli, India Sept 27 - Oct 11 http://www.delhiphotofestival.com/delhi_photo_festival_2013/print_exhibitions_dpf.html   Jardin Duo show with Amy Wong Curated by Lisa Van Gerven Galerie Albus Lux, Rosendaal, Netherlands Nov 2013 www.albuslux.nl      

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BIOGRAPHY
Truc-Anh is a French artist, born in Paris in 1983. He lives and works in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam since 2011. 
 
He studied at Ecole Supérieure d’Art Appliqués Boulle in Paris in 2001. Then, he moved to Belgium and get a Bachelor, a Master, and an Aggregation at National School of Visuals Arts La Cambre in Brussels where he taught Painting and in the 3 Dimensional Research departement in 2010. He was also awarded a Post Graduate at ECAL High School of Visuals Arts in Lausanne, Switzerland.
 
In 2006, he won the Prix de la Fondation Manganel in Lausanne. He was Laureate of Photo Europa prize 2009. His photo work have recently been selected for the New Delhi Photo Festival 2013 in India.
 
Since 2006 he has exhibited in groupshows in Belgium and abroad as well as in solo shows in France, Belgium, Netherlands, Vietnam and Switzerland for the-solo-art-project in Basel.His work is in various private and public collections such as ELAC Espace Lausannois d’Art Contemporain in Switzerland and in the Artist Pension Trust Beijing, China.
 
Furthermore, he prepared two solo shows at 105 Besme in Brussels an Galerie Sator in Paris. 
He prepared a group show with Galerie Albus Lux in Roosendaal, Netherlands.
 
His artwork is represented by  Galerie Quynh (Vietnam), Galerie Sator (France), 105 Besme (Belgium), and Albus Lux (Netherlands). 
 

For additional information about this artist, visit Mutual Art