LOS ANGELES, CA.- Galerie Gmurzynska is presenting Without Obsession I Am Lost, Anh Duongs first solo show in Los Angeles and her second show with the gallery, coming on the heels of an acclaimed exhibition with the gallery in Zurich in 2021. Curated by Isabelle Bscher, Galerie Gmurzynska New Yorks Managing Partner, the exhibition is on view at Spring Place Beverly Hills, a members-only collaborative workspace and social club.
Featuring more than 25 oil paintings, including several never before seen works created in 2022, the exhibition explores questions of self and identity in the 21st century. Captivating and voyeuristic, Duong's portraits and self-portraits are both revealing and mysterious, as if watching something about to unfold. The viewer enters private moments in intimate spaces. The paintings capture a specific mood or time in the life of the artist and yet we are left to wonder what that moment or chapter may have been. The exaggerated eyes transfix our gaze, and we feel captured, pierced, exposed, as nude as the oils we are observing. However many doors these paintings open, they throw up an even greater number of closed ones, making them all the more alluring and intriguing.
The still-lives, which Duong also identifies as self-portraits, speak to a relationship with the self. They show typical objects from a womans boudoir, such as shoes, perfumes, and make-up, perhaps representing a modern woman's armor as well as hinting at a consumerist underpinning. Like the portraits, these objects speak of a woman's relationship with her self-image. How essential is this armor, portrayed in such a seductive manner? Whatever is said about women or identity in the 21st century, Duong's enigmatic paintings never fail to seduce and capture the viewer.
Anh Duong was born in Bordeaux, France to a Vietnamese father and Spanish mother. She studied architecture at the École des beaux-arts in Paris and danced with the Franchetti Academy of Classical Dance. In 1988 she moved to New York City where she began painting.
Her unique perspective is influenced by her varied aesthetic career and creative interests, as a successful model, actress and muse, inspiring artists such as Julian Schnabel, working with major designers such as Donna Karan and John Galliano, and posing for esteemed photographers. Discovered by David Seidner, who photographed her for the iconic YSL campaign for Vogue in 1986, Duong later posed with Peter Lindbergh, Mario Testino, and Patrick Demarchelier to name a few and appeared in publications such as Elle and Architectural Digest.
Forgetting the subject to focus on the technical painting itself, the artist focuses on the portrait, and mostly the self-portrait that she paints on a daily basis likening it to a visual diary.
Duong has however also worked on portraits of prominent art collectors and personalities, such as Princess Maria Theresia Alexandra of Thurn and Taxis, Simon de Pury, Aby Rosen, Susan Sarandon, Domenico Dolce, Natalia Vodianova, and Anjelica Huston among others. One of her important portrait commissions was by Barry Diller for his yachts figurehead a sculpture standing almost three meters in stainless steel of Diane von Furstenberg. The National Portrait Gallery in Washington DC acquired another portrait she painted of Furstenberg for their permanent collection. Most recently, she was commissioned to sculpt 50 stars for the entrance wall of the Statue of Liberty Museum in New York.