Archival Document

Name/Title

Archival Document

Entry/Object ID

2017.14b

Description

3 images of girl over various government documents

Acquisition

Notes

Collection of DePaul Art Museum; Art Acquisition Endowment Fund

Made/Created

Artist

Ngo, Hu'ong

Date made

2017

Ethnography

Notes

Vietnam France North American

Lexicon

Legacy Lexicon

Class

PHOTOGRAPHS

Dimensions

Dimension Description

overall

Width

13-5/8 in

Length

10 in

Interpretative Labels

Label Type

Cultural/Historical Context

Label

Archival Documents, 2017 Photographs Courtesy of the artist The passport, photographs, and documents from the National Overseas Archives in Aix-enProvence, France, reproduced here depict Nguyễn Thị Minh Khai, one of the most notable women in Vietnamese revolutionary history and the central figure of the exhibition. After years of working with Vietnamese Communist leader Hồ Chí Minh in Hong Kong, she returned to Vietnam to oppose the French government and lead the anti-colonial movement. The French National police captured her in 1940 and executed her by firing squad along with other anti-colonists. While schools, streets, and hotels in Vietnam bear her name, the historical record of Minh Khai is thin and stitched together from bits of information salvaged from French police reports and interrogation documents. Hương Ngô’s research of Minh Khai serves not to close the gaps in the historical record, but to explore the absences and find new ways to tell the impossible stories of gender, colonialism, and violence contained in them.