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Việt Nam Exodus Project | Hong Kong Chapter: flotsam and jetsam | 2015-2018
Water Dreamscape Scroll: the gangster named Jacky, the sleepers, and the exodus | 2017-2018 | watercolor on paper | 113.5 x 924.5 cm. [This painting is part of the Vietnam Exodus History Learning Project, carried out in collaboration with Hồ Hưng and Huỳnh Quốc Bảo.]
Fieldwork: with former Vietnamese refugees in Hong Kong, 2015
Fieldwork: with former Vietnamese refugees in Hong Kong, 2015
(R) UNHCR records and figures: remapping regional movements, arrivals, resettlements of V-refugees in 1979 | 2016 | 110 x 70 cm
From the Sea and Back to the Sea: the ten-year journey of a stateless, unaccompanied minor | 2016
embroidery on canvas | 80 x 100 cm
HKSAR statistics on yearly arrivals and departures of V-refugees from 1975-1997 | 2016 | 79 x 100 cm
Research Lab at Spring Workshop, HK, 2017
archival records, photographs, film footage from AP & UNHCR | Courtesy the UNHCR Archive & other online sources
Permanent Transitory Homes: HK correctional institutions, detention centers, and refugee camps from archival records and Google mapping | 2015 | 75 x 92 cm
Green Island Reception Centre, HK, c.1990s (source: SCMP)
Fieldwork | Site Visit: former Green Island Reception Center, 2016
A Vietnamese child refugee at Tai A Chau Detention Centre, c.1990s
Fieldwork | Site Visit: former Tai A Chau Detention Centre, 2016
Fieldwork | Site Visit: former Chi Ma Wan Correctional Institution, 2016
Fieldwork | Site Visit: former Chi Ma Wan Correctional Institution, 2016
Fieldwork | Site Visit: former Victoria Prison, 2016
Fieldwork: with former Vietnamese refugees at the site of Tai A Chau Detention Centre, 2016
km 0 – Son’s story | 2017 | HD, audio, color | 33'19" [image from Fieldwork | Site Visit of former High Island Detention Centre]
km 0 – Son’s story | 2017 | HD, audio, color | 33'19"
A Case Study of the UNHCR–Hong Kong Refugee Status Determination: escape journey of a stateless ethnic-Chinese Vietnamese between 1978-1997 | 2019 | 79 x 100 cm
A Study of Pillar Point VRC and A Ten-Year Journey of An Unaccompanied Minor | 2018 | 79 x 100 cm
Panel Discussion: Asylum Policy & Refugee Experience, Spring Workshop | 2017
Panel Discussion: Asylum Policy & Refugee Experience, Tai Kwun Contemporary | 2018
Panel Discussion: Art in Times of Crisis, Tai Kwun Contemporary | 2018
Between 2015–2018, Chung conducted her research project in Hong Kong with a group of former Vietnamese refugees, who were allowed to integrate into Hong Kong society upon the last camp being shut down in 2000. Chung comprehensively crosschecked materials from her library research with the refugees’ own accounts of escape journeys, living conditions in detention centers, screening process, protesting forced repatriation, being deported, and the impact of those policies on their lives. The research also focused on some of the now Hong Kong residents but with a stateless status, including a group of homeless Vietnamese–the leftover refugees from the last century, who were rejected by western host countries for their prior involvement with crimes in Hong Kong. With the support of Sophia Law, Spring Workshop, and Tai Kwun Contemporary, Chung and some of these refugees traced and visited the sites of former detention centers and camps with Spring Workshop team, including Victoria Prison and those on outlying islands. Chung then used Google Mapping to mark these places on a map of Hong Kong, as shown in the work Permanent Transitory Homes.
Moreover, Chung’s work in Hong Kong and research at the UNHCR in Geneva unearthed records and reports that shed light on the politics between host countries and with the UNHCR, notably the complex relationship between Hong Kong, U.K., China, U.S., and the UNHCR in handling this refugee crisis. Building relationship with the former refugees and focusing on places of transit such as Hong Kong, a port of first asylum (1975-2000) shaped Chung’s project writ large, which aimed to shift the established narrative and stigmatization of this refugee population – reclaiming the refugees’ agency through their participation in the making and in a series of public discussions with Hong Kong based human rights lawyers as a culminated result.
[The VNEP | HK Chapter was supported by Sophia Law, Que Nguyen, Son Hoang, Carol Tong Thi Xuan, Lavina & William Lim, Christina Li and her team at Spring Workshop, Tai Kwun Contemporary, Tyler Rollins Fine Art, and Asian Cultural Council NY. The project was contributed by Gladys Li, Mark Daly, and a group of former Vietnamese refugees residing in HK.]
Related Exhibitions:
Imagined Borders | 12th Gwangju Biennale, Korea | 2018
Dismantling the Scaffold | Tai Kwun Contemporary, Hong Kong | 2018
Superposition-Equilibrium & Engagement | 21st Biennale of Sydney | 2018
the unwanted population | Tyler Rollins Fine Art, New York | 2017
A Collective Present | Spring Workshop, Hong Kong | 2017
The Việt Nam Exodus Project | Hong Kong Chapter | Art Basel Hong Kong | 2016