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Phan was born in a Catholic
Village north of Hanoi, and went south with her family at the time
of partition in 1954. She came to the United States in 1969. For many years she did not want to return to Vietnam because in her mind
it was a place of death and sorrow.
In January 1992 she was able to return with an American woman
journalist friend. After a 23-year absence she was able to
reestablish her relationship with her sister and her sister’s nine
children and nine grandchildren. She was able to return to her
native village north of Hanoi to visit her uncle and cousins and to
burn incense at her mother’s grave.
On her return home to Kona, she dealt for months with the
overwhelming emotions stirred by the trip. She tried various media
to express her mourning for her mother and all of those who died in
the Vietnam War. She began with paintings and quilts, but then
a new kind of work emerged. She writes: “This
series of works is about my unresolved feeling for my mother’s land,
about mourning the souls that died in the
Vietnam war, and about healing the wound—mine and others—whose life has been
affected by the war. MAU TRANG KHAN TANG or THE WHITE MOURNING CLOTH
is about making peace with part of my soul that was in pain all
through these years—the pain of growing up in the war, of seeing
suffering, death, violence and corruptions.” When the series was
completed, Phan created a Healing Ceremony for the community at the
reception for the exhibition in Kona in August 1994.
Through Phan’s Rainforest Series, Metamorphosis , The White Mourning
Cloth , and Temple for the Wandering Souls Series, we go from joy
through sadness to a post-traumatic rebirth. |
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