On view

Asian Art
Huo Pavilion
Christina Lee Gallery

Arizona,

1987

Kwong Chi Tseng, 1950–1990; born Hong Kong; died New York, NY; active New York
2019-391

In these two photographs, Tseng Kwong Chi poses as a tourist within the spectacular landscapes of the Grand Canyon and Arizona. In his iconic Mao suit, Tseng acts, in his own words, as “an inquisitive traveler, a witness of my time, and an ambiguous ambassador.” In Grand Canyon, he sits upright at the bottom center of the photograph, facing a splendid view. In Arizona, Tseng keeps his body rigidly straight and refrains from showing any emotion behind a pair of sunglasses, creating an uncanny contrast with the expressive tree on the left. His intentionally impersonal gestures create a sense of displacement that defamiliarizes the well-known landmarks and calls into question one’s relationship with the photographed landscape. At the intersection of self-portraiture, tourist photography, and survey photography of the American West, Tseng’s photographs contest the definitions of photographic genres and the boundary between creative self-expression and objective documentation.


Yixu Chen, PhD candidate, Department of Art and Archaeology, Princeton University

Information

Title
Arizona
Dates

1987

Medium
Gelatin silver print
Dimensions
image: 18.8 × 19 cm (7 3/8 × 7 1/2 in.) sheet: 20.3 × 25.4 cm (8 × 10 in.) mat: 35.6 × 27.9 cm (14 × 11 in.)
Credit Line
Museum purchase, Mary Trumbull Adams Art Fund
Object Number
2019-391
Place Depicted

North America, United States, Arizona

The artist. Asian American Arts Centre, New York, NY; purchased by the Princeton University Art Museum, 2019.