AMBIGUOUS
AMBASSADOR
Tseng Kwong Chi
Hardbound,
12" x 13", 120 pages
95 four-color
plates
2004, Nazraeli Press
Essay by Dan Cameron
From
the Publisher:
In the late 1970s in New York, Joseph Tseng,
fresh from Paris art school after a Hong Kong childhood and an
adolescence in Canada, chose to don a second-hand Mao suit for
a family outing which required formal wear, and was surprised
at the reactions the uniform provoked: deference, scorn, curiosity,
but never indifference. It was a pivotal moment in the artist’s
life, transforming him from overseas visitor to formal representative
of a different culture. It was also the start of his series of
self-portraits in which Tseng Kwong Chi (he reverted to his birth
name) posed in front of a wide range of world landmarks and iconic
nature sites beloved by snapshot taking tourists, such as the
Statue of Liberty, London Bridge, Notre Dame, Disneyland, Canadian
Rockies and the Grand Canyon. Always poker-faced, there is no
question that this other persona is serious and rigorous in his
intent – which is why it is impossible not to smile at these
remarkable, sometimes startling, or unbelievably funny images.
Tseng Kwong Chi died at age 39 in 1990, but his pictures live
on with a timeless resilience. This will be the most complete
book of the work to date, which is now shown widely in major museums,
including the Shanghai Biennale 2004.
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