Absorbing Nocturnal Perception 36x36 oil on canvas
I first became aware of Khang Nguyen’s luminous visionary oil paintings when Carl Berg asked me to be the the juror for the Irvine Fine Arts Center “All Media 2012” show, for which I selected one of Khang's paintings and awarded him first prize. I love serving jury duty on these open call exhibits -- there's always very surprising artworks, things that have slipped through the cracks or otherwise circumvented the art world radar.
Limpid Moonlit Posture 36x36 oil on canvas
Khang’s work initially struck me as a very sophisticated and historically informed variation on Modernist geometric abstraction, but discovered in subsequent conversations that he is almost entirely self-taught, and that his imagery derives not from 20th century art historical (and blacklight scifi paperback cover) precedents, but from experiential phenomena encountered in the course of his yogic meditative practice.
Self-Organizing Field of Intuitive Utterance 48 x 48, oil on canvas
It was Khang's work in that Irvine show that sparked the idea for
practice, Practice, practice, and it continues to epitomize the kind of spiritually rooted art practice that is so invisible to and in The Art World, and which
pPp is designed to showcase. Here are some more of his paintings. Even more work -- plus information about his yogic discipline -- may be gleaned from his website at:
http://www.intuitiveformation.com/yoga.html. Khang will also be demonstrating some advanced yoga asanas for the
pPperformance Night on Wednesday April 6th -- more details to come!
Awareness Encountering Its Own Modes of Presenting 48 x 60 oil on canvas, 2013
Here is Khang's Artist Statement:
"As an integral facet of my non-traditional spiritual and aesthetic practice within the schools of non-dual, intuitive discernment, my intimate engagement with visual art is an instrument for uprooting opaque settlements of the mind. Exploratory in nature, my artworks of architectural and geometric formations (yantra) are not considered means to individual self-expression, but reflect an investigation into the essence of perception, awareness, and existence. They probe the mystery of time, space, and being, which call into question preconceived notions concerning the nature of identity and reality.
Translated into visual terms from spiritual intuitions, these nonrepresentational formations depict the primal source from which all phenomena manifest, by which all things subsist, and to which all things reintegrate. By revealing the inner qualities and processes of perceptual awareness, the work of art acts as a conduit between limited perception and spacious awareness through which the beholder leaps into an expanded realm of existence. My work inquires how the viewer, upon closely contemplating visual relationships, can be incited to transcend external aspects of form such that a clear space for direct awareness into the basis of being becomes possible. This is fundamental to my investigation of visual media’s capacity to spontaneously evoke an immediate awareness of reality without dependence on any reasoning process."
Rendering Nascent Matrix 36 x 36 oil on canvas 2012
Moonlit Facets of Perceiving 48x60 oil on canvas 2013
Purple Robe Draping Night Cascade 60x48, oil on canvas, 2014
Steps of Time Free From the Past 60x48, oil on canvas
Khang is currently a graduate student in Comparative Religion at Claremont, and the full text of his paper
Mysticism East and West is appended after the jump...