Minneapolis Institute of Art: 30 great artworks chosen by Mia’s curators to mark Women’s History Month

Minneapolis, USA | 28 March 2020

Original Source


Reconstructing an exodus history: flight routes from camps and of ODP cases by Tiffany Chung (Vietnamese born 1969), 2017. Embroidery on fabric.

This work, from 2017, consists of an intricately embroidered world map with numerous dotted pink lines sewn in that crisscross the globe on a black fabric background. Each of these lines represent a flight route associated with the Orderly Departure Program (ODP), which oversaw the resettlement of Vietnamese refugees from 1980 to 1997 under the auspices of the United Nations Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). Approximately 623,000 Vietnamese individuals were resettled abroad as part of this program globally, of which roughly 458,000 came to the United States. As with much of Chung’s cartographic work, each map contains a complex system of coding along with explanatory legends that are often informed by what is missing: the voices and memories of these landscapes’ inhabitants. Chung takes on the role of ethnographer and historian to further document what the cartographic records and statistics cannot, the lived experiences and personal accounts embedded in these topographies.

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Minneapolis Institute of Art: The American War: ‘Artists Reflect’ recounts the Vietnam War from the Southeast Asian perspective