Spatial Imaginations: The Reconstruction of Memory
In Nothing Ever Dies, Viet Thanh Nguyen argues that “all
wars are fought twice, the first time on the battlefield,
the second time in memory.” But I would argue that
all wars are fought three times: the first time on the
battlefield, the second time in memory, and the third
in the imagination. The exhibition revolves around
this framework: tracing the history of Vietnam to
examine what had happened, exploring what had been
remembered, and speculating the future by reimagining
the country in 2150.
In conceptualizing the exhibition, three different forms
of memory play out simultaneously. The exhibition
is made up of three components: the first traces the
history of Vietnam through a slide projection of archival
photos, the second recounts the history of Vietnam
through narration, and the third offers an experience
through the transformation of the room as a way of
situating the visitors in the future. In each of these three
components
—
the past, the present, and the future
—
are
interwoven, creating a multifaceted reality.
M.Arch Thesis — Exhibition
Advisors: Brian McLaren (chair), Nicole Huber (chair) & Junichi Satoh