351 Canal St
New York, NY
Trail Dust features recent work by Vietnamese artist Trương Công Tùng (Đắk Lắk province, b. 1986), exploring the artist’s ongoing interest in the histories, rituals, and mythologies of land stewardship.
Akin to the way a gardener nurtures a parcel of land, Trương Công Tùng tends to his work over time, allowing it to evolve, change, and iterate in response to the specifics of each site. Combining natural materials with found objects of an inorganic, disruptive, or incongruent nature, Trương Công Tùng reflects on the interruption of Indigenous practices by the forces of modernity, colonialism, and conflict. Rather than lamenting what has passed, Trương Công Tùng’s poetic sensibilities find resilience in a reimagining of the land as a site of communion between the physical and spiritual worlds.
At Canal Projects, Trương Công Tùng reimagines a living garden as a heavy beaded curtain. Draped along the edge of the gallery, the curtain is woven with beads that originate from forest trees including those that were introduced to Vietnam during the process of industrialization, such as coffee, avocado, rubber, and cashew trees.
Alongside the curtain are a series of low platforms filled with dirt and seeds, each containing an installation of heavily lacquered gourds connected through a web of clear plastic tubing, bubbling as water is pumped between them. Lacquer is also utilized in a series of paintings, Shadows in the Garden #2 (2023), in which natural and bodily forms are obscured by layers of thick lacquer tree resin sanded to a smooth, nearly glowing surface giving way to a spectral quality. Lacquer, a traditional craft material in East Asia, underwent a transformation into an art form during the French colonial period. This elevation established lacquer as a unique art medium that Trương Công Tùng now uses as a metaphor for the region’s own complicated narrative—layers of history being applied, erased, and rewritten.
According to Vietnamese folklore, it is believed that the last things seen by an animal before their death are permanently captured in their eyes. In accompanying video, The Lost Landscape #1 (2021), viewers are taken through the Natural History Museum in Paris, honing in on close-up shots of the glass eyes of taxidermied animals. Trương Công Tùng’s works on view trace this journey of loss and metaphorically suggest a new path to new ends.