Shetland Arts has something very unusual lined up. From 3 February until 9 March, Mareel will be hosting The Colony, a film installation by Vietnamese-born artist and filmmaker Dinh Q. Lê. It’s a fascinating piece that looks at bird populations, land use and exploitation in the Cincha Islands, off Peru. Jane Matthews, Exhibition Manager explains:
“I thought it would be of particular interest here, relevant in the context of our own ecology and bird populations and the fact we are an island with an interesting history of land use. And, apart from anything else, it has amazing footage and a beguiling story to tell. The work has been shown previously in London, Sheffield, Birmingham and Rotterdam, and will be shown in Lima, Peru after it's shown here in Shetland. It is excellent to be a part of the story of this artwork as well."
The powerful three-screen installation immerses the viewer in panoramic scenes of the timeless and desolate Chincha Islands and gradually reveals a sublime landscape with a complex history, which includes the exploitation of guano by the British and a war over that resource – which was used as fertiliser – fought by Spanish, Peruvian and American forces. The islands are no longer permanently inhabited, but some guano is still harvested.
Dinh Q. Lê was born in Hà Tiên, in what was then South Vietnam, in 1968. In the late 1970s, his family escaped by boat before eventually settling in the US where he completed his education. He now spends time in both Vietnam and Los Angeles producing his work, which includes installation, video, sculpture, and urban intervention. He has exhibited extensively in many international group shows and was the first Vietnamese artist to have a solo show at the Museum of Modern Art, New York. His film, shot from a boat approaching the islands, cameras on the ground and drones circling above, is accompanied by Daniel Wohl’s elegiac soundtrack. Lê captures a bleak landscape haunted by its brutal past.