"HIC DOMUS EST DEI"

"HIC DOMUS EST DEI"

From the Dong Duong Lang Du project from 2016

by Lê Phi Long

 2017

Many thank : VCCA, Royal Cty, Hanoi, Việt Nam // VCCA team

Curator: Mizuki Endo

Special thanks to : K.L // Technical Assistants   : Bind Lê (Thịnh).Lê Kim Liên.Na Lê

Assistant Researcher :  Anne Vo (Ngân)

Photographer& cameraman : Duc Be and VCCA team // Film Editor: Đặng Hoàng Nam

Ben House - Thao Dinh Bui  // Father Ngọc - Ka Đơn // Church St. Nicholas Cathedral  in Đà Lạt


Lê Phi Long’s Hic Domus Est Dei translates the soaring tower of the St. Nicholas Cathedral in Đà Lạt into a enigmatic wooden spire. Working from the woodlands of Đà Lạt, the artist collects and marshals wooden beams and tree trunks into a revitalized steeple of the cathedral, built by French missionaries in the 1930s.
A performative transubstantiation of architecture and history unfolds as the apex of a holy tower, along with the haunting history of French evangelism in the Central Highlands, are sorcerized into an eye-level altar made of wood fragments. Naming his installation Hic Domus Est Dei, the grand message at the cathedral’s entrance, meaning “This is the House of God,” Lê Phi Long reshapes and expands the former Eurocentric regimentation of a strictly Christian God, imbuing silent timber with the energy of the divine. The silk that binds the wooden shafts bear the royal shade of Bảo Đại, the emperor and head of the 1950s’ colonial demarcation of the Central Highlands, the so-called French domain of the Crown. As it semi-visibly winds through the tree trunks, the imperial yellow carries the knots of bondage and ghosts of both external and internal empire.

Poetic manifestations of transience are built into the transplantable installation. As the work passes through different sites, the once monotheistic and stable God of European missionaries is now made itinerant, pluralistic and animated in the flesh of timber. In multiple itirations of the installation, the artist inscribes the work’s title on the ground using blackboard chalk. The soft white medium generates letters that self-erase with wind, sunshowers or passers-by, disseminating the Latin inscription in faint traces across the landscapes where the artist erects impermanent interventions. Floating through this shifting web of histories, faiths and terrains is an unnameable scent that migrates with the work from Đà Lạt. Merging with the intangible sounds of Hallelujah, a blur between folk rock and melancholy hymn, the perfume of pine forests carries the sacrality of the ephemeral.
Exhibition Text by Nguyễn Hoàng Quyên
Link : http://vccavietnam.com/trien-lam-quottoa-2the-foliage-2quot
https://hanoigrapevine.com/2018/06/foliage-ii-must-see-exhibition-you-havent/











































































Da Lat, Vietnam 2017 





































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