Dinh Q. Le "The Penal Colony"

P.P.O.W.

poster for Dinh Q. Le "The Penal Colony"

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Dinh Q. Lê has been working for over a decade with issues of politics, memory and history, and he continues this exploration with The Penal Colony. Inspired by recent events in America, in particular the inhumane treatment of prisoners at Guantanamo Bay detention camp in Cuba, this installation highlights the injustices and hidden aspects of war and the secrets behind prison walls. The Penal Colony consists of a four - channel video installation entitled The Penal Colony and a new photo-tapestry series, The Hill of Poisonous Trees.

The videos in The Penal Colony were shot in the political prison built on Con Dao Island, Vietnam in 1854 by the French colonial government. During the Vietnam War, the prison was well known for imprisoning and torturing anti-war activists. Most of the activists imprisoned were nationalist, anti-French and anti-US involvement in Vietnam, rather a communist. Thousands experienced the horrific living conditions in the notorious “tiger cages.” Prisoners were constantly abused and tortured to renounce their communist belief, while at the same time they were also under constant pressure from their fellow prisoners to convert.

The Hill of Poisonous Trees (the translation of Tuol Sleng) has brought Lê to The Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum in Phnom Phen, Cambodia, the infamous Security Prison 21 (S-21) built by the Khmer Rouge regime. Featuring Lê’s distinctive photo weaving technique, this series focuses on the crudely constructed prison environment, which was originally a high school. Images of the prisoners are interwoven with Buddha portraits from the Temple of Siem Riep and with the prison’s interior to create haunting images of Cambodia’s history and the secrets of war.

Media

Schedule

from May 01, 2008 to May 31, 2008

Artist(s)

Dinh Q. Le

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