A COMEDY FOR MORTALS: PURGATORIO

Lehmann Maupin presents A Comedy for Mortals: Purgatorio, Tammy Nguyen’s solo exhibition in the United Kingdom. Purgatorio is the second exhibition in a three-part series based on the Divine Comedy, Dante Alighieri’s canonical masterpiece of Christian literature.

March 13 – April 20, 2024

Nguyen’s multidisciplinary practice explores the intersections between geopolitics, ecology, and history, using narrative to intertwine disparate subjects through artmaking. Across her mediums, Nguyen’s work aims to unsettle, and the tension between her elegant forms and harmonious aesthetics often belies the nature of her storytelling. She probes this contrast between form and content by confusing the visual plane, which she achieves by creating intricate visual metaphors nestled within many layers of diverse material.

In Nguyen’s version of The Divine Comedy, Dante’s three epics act as a metaphor for the geopolitics of Southeast Asia during the Cold War. Nguyen constructs narratives that explore the moral gray areas that permeate global history, probing the power language has to shape these ambiguities. Her world building is often ripe with inversion—in Inferno, Nguyen tracked Dante and Virgil’s descent into hell against the Space Race—up is down, day is night, and large is small.

The paintings in Purgatorio are united in formal qualities but marked by distinct characters—from statuesque angels appropriated from Gianlorenzo Bernini sculptures, to prehistoric dinosaurs, to a host of international leaders from the 1955 Bandung Conference in Indonesia. Nguyen immerses these characters in a lexicon of imagery that sets the scene for her version of purgatory, which takes the form of an island that exists in liminal time and space, each occupant a kind of refugee in an eternal state of waiting.

Nguyen’s dinosaurs allude to one monster in particular—Godzilla, whose depiction first developed in 1950s Japan. In this way, the dinosaurs in Purgatorio reference the continued threat of atomic warfare and serve as a vehicle for the address of traumas past. Other works, such as I Pray to God That This Asian-African Conference Succeeds (2024) and World Peace is Not Merely the Absence of War (2024), depict individuals who were present at the Bandung Conference, where African and Asian leaders gathered to imagine a future independent from Western influence and control. These figures permeate the environment of purgatory, gesturing towards the endurance of ideas and resistance.

A Comedy for Mortals: Purgatorio culminates in a large-scale artist book entitled Mine, Purgatory (2024), which itself takes the form of a mountain and opens inwards like a mine. With each turn of the page, the reader descends into the mountain, growing closer to the center. The pages themselves contain excerpts from both the Bandung Conference and Dante’s cantos in Purgatorio; Nguyen manipulates the stanzas to create her own idiosyncratic translation, which becomes increasingly complete as one reaches the end of the book.

As the cantos conclude with Dante’s discovery of his true love, Nguyen’s reader approaches the center of the mine, and treasure is unveiled: at the base of the book is the golden imprint of a dinosaur foot. Through an investigation of the materiality of language, Nguyen’s artist book in A Comedy for Mortals: Purgatorio offers a paradigm for the formation of both identity and history, and in their intersection, probes the good, the bad, and the morally ambiguous.

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