CANCELED: Hong-an Truong
+ Add to calendarThu, Mar 12 2020, 6:30PM - 8PM
350 Kansas St., San Francisco, California, 94107 View map
Part of event series: Focus Fine Arts
Organized by
CCA Wattis and Fine Arts
Entry details
This event has been postponed due to CCA’s ongoing response to the evolving COVID–19 outbreak. Please check back at a later date for updates.
Hồng-Ân Trương the 2020 Capp Street Artist-in-Residence, uses photography, video, and sound to explore immigrant, refugee, and decolonial narratives and subjectivities. Her work has been shown in both solo and group exhibitions at the International Center for Photography (NY), Art in General (NY), the Nasher Museum of Art (Durham, NC), The Kitchen (NY), Nhà Sàn (Hanoi), the Irish Museum of Modern Art (Dublin, Ireland), EFA Project Space (NY), Leslie Tonkonow Gallery (NY), the Rubber Factory (NY), the Phillips Collection (Washington D.C.) and the Minneapolis Institute of Art (MN), among many others. She was included in the New Orleans triennial Prospect.4: The Lotus in Spite of the Swamp in 2017-2018. Her collaborative work with Hương Ngô was exhibited in Being: New Photography 2018 at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. Her work has been reviewed in Artforum, The New Yorker, the New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and Hyperallergic, among others. Her writing has appeared in the Brooklyn Rail, Shifter Magazine, Pastelegram Magazine, PERFORMA09: Back to Futurism, edited by Roselee Goldberg, and Contemporary Theater Review, among other publications. She has been awarded an Art Matters Foundation Grant, a Foundation for Contemporary Arts emergency grant, and is a 2019-2020 Guggenheim Foundation Fellow in Fine Art. Upcoming 2020 exhibitions include the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago (MCA), the Maryland Institute College of Art (MICA), and the University Art Gallery at New Mexico State University. She received her MFA from the University of California, Irvine and was a fellow in the Whitney Independent Study Program. Hồng-Ân is based in Durham, North Carolina where she is an activist and a teacher. She is an Associate Professor of Art at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.