Ancestral Altar # 14

Title

Ancestral Altar # 14

Subject

Virginia
Art

Description

Born in Vietnam in 1977, two years after the fall of Saigon, Danh and his family left their home in 1979 and immigrated to the United States in the early 1980s. The experience of displacement and his eventual trip back to his country of birth inspired the artist to create work exploring his homeland's history using found and natural materials. By inventing a process known as chlorophyll painting, Danh found the perfect metaphor to honor the thousands of people murdered by the Khmer Rouge regime. Printed on a variety of tropical plants, Danh's portraits of the victims are permanently imprinted into the matrix of the leave's structure.

Creator

Binh Danh (Vietnamese, Born 1977)

Rights

http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/

Format

image/jpeg

Type

Image

Identifier

TAU_ART_000139
2006.039

Date Created

2005

Is Part Of

Taubman Museum of Art

Medium

prints (visual works)
chlorophyll print and resin

Provenance

Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. University Libraries
Taubman Museum of Art (Repository)
Purchase with funds from the Cherry Hill Endowment

Files

TAU_ART_000139_0007.jpg

Tags

Citation

Binh Danh (Vietnamese, Born 1977), “Ancestral Altar # 14,” Southwest Virginia Digital Archive, accessed October 10, 2024, https://di.lib.vt.edu/items/show/963.