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Sống, on view from May 29 through June 28, 2026, at the nonprofit organization CENTER in Santa Fe, marks a notable shift in the public understanding of Ocean Vuong’s creative practice. Widely recognized for his acclaimed literary work, Vuong here presents a deeply personal body of photographs that reveals a parallel visual language developed over more than two decades. The exhibition title, drawn from the Vietnamese word for “to live,” signals a meditation on survival, intimacy, and continuity.
At the core of the exhibition is an extended photographic series centered on Vuong’s younger brother, created in the years following their mother’s death. These images trace a shared experience of grief and resilience, unfolding through scenes of everyday life. Fluorescent-lit nail salons—echoing the labor that shaped the artist’s upbringing—contrast with quieter domestic interiors, where gestures of care and moments of stillness take on heightened emotional weight. The photographs resist spectacle, instead favoring a restrained, attentive approach that aligns closely with the sensibility of Vuong’s writing.
Born in Saigon and raised in the United States within a working-class immigrant family, Vuong often addresses themes of displacement, memory, and identity. These concerns carry through into
Sống, where the camera becomes a tool for both witnessing and preserving fragile connections. The images function less as standalone compositions than as fragments of an ongoing narrative, shaped by time and proximity.
Presented by CENTER, an organization long dedicated to supporting socially engaged, lens-based work, the exhibition situates Vuong’s photographs within a broader conversation about storytelling across mediums. Known for championing projects that reflect lived experience and cultural complexity, the institution provides an apt context for this intimate body of work.
In
Sống, photography emerges as an extension of language—another means through which Vuong examines what it means to endure, remember, and ultimately, to live.
Image:
From the series Sống © Ocean Vuong