May 4, 2026
Search
Facebook Instagram X-twitter Youtube
  • Home
  • Insider Reports
    • Texas Border Crisis
    • Politics
    • Business
    • Opinion
  • Lifestyle
    • Texas Family Values
    • Culture
    • Health & Fitness
    • Events
  • World News
  • About
  • Contact
  • Home
  • Insider Reports
    • Texas Border Crisis
    • Politics
    • Business
    • Opinion
  • Lifestyle
    • Texas Family Values
    • Culture
    • Health & Fitness
    • Events
  • World News
  • About
  • Contact

A Dallas Artist Turned Memory Into Porcelain — and the Result Is Breathtaking

Marina Fatina by Marina Fatina
May 4, 2026
in Events, Top News
0
A Dallas Artist Turned Memory Into Porcelain — and the Result Is Breathtaking
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Du Chau: Tracing the Threads of Memory is now on view at the Crow Museum of Asian Art in the Dallas Arts District through March 2027. Free admission.

Some exhibitions ask you to look. This one asks you to remember.

Du Chau: Tracing the Threads of Memory opened April 4 at the Crow Museum of Asian Art in the Dallas Arts District and runs through March 14, 2027 — nearly a full year to visit, revisit, and let it settle into you. Free and open to the public Tuesday through Sunday, this is one of the most quietly powerful solo exhibitions Dallas has seen in years.

The Artist

Du Chau was born in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam in 1968 and immigrated to the United States in 1981. He built a career in medical pathology — working as a Pathology Technical Coordinator at Methodist Hospital of Dallas — before taking a sabbatical to pursue a BFA and MFA at the New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University. He returned to Dallas and continues both careers simultaneously: working in pathology and teaching ceramics as an adjunct professor at Dallas College.

That unusual background — science and art, precision and fragility, the clinical and the deeply personal — lives in every piece he makes.

The Exhibition

The works in Tracing the Threads of Memory are built from two materials: porcelain and piano wire. The combination is not accidental. Porcelain, translucent and seemingly hollow when light passes through it, becomes a metaphor for the way memory works — present but porous, shaped by what has passed through it. The piano wire suspends each delicate ceramic form from the wall, the ceiling, or above the floor, creating installations that drift and sway like something caught between remembering and forgetting.

“The fragility and strength of porcelain act as metaphors for lived experiences — embracing caregiving, education, survival, and the quiet presence of nature,” Chau has said. The wires, created to conduct sound, now conduct something else entirely — narrative, emotion, the threads of a life lived across two continents and multiple identities.

The forms are rooted in the natural world Chau knew as a child in Vietnam — blossoming plant tendrils, willow branches, bitter gourd, seeds, fruits, herbs. Each one is a memory rendered in ceramic. Each one is also completely legible to a viewer who has never set foot in Vietnam, because the language of food, family, plants, and roots is universal.

The central work in the exhibition is Seeds of Memory, which Chau expanded specifically for this showing by incorporating both new and existing components. The additive process within the work — building outward over time — mirrors the cycles of growth and labor that defined the farming traditions of his family in Vietnam, and mirrors his own emotional journey as an immigrant navigating identity, belonging, and creative practice across decades.

Texas Ties

This exhibition is part of the Crow Museum’s Texas Ties series, dedicated to presenting artists with significant roots in Texas as part of their professional journeys. Du Chau’s connection to Dallas runs deep — he has exhibited at the Erin Cluley Gallery, serves as co-founder of Goldmark Cultural Center in DFW, has curated more than 50 national and international exhibitions, and received the 2024 Moss/Chumley North Texas Artist Award for his advocacy on behalf of the visual arts community.

His work is held in collections across the United States and internationally — in Chile, Rome, Taiwan, Nigeria, Turkey, and New York — but Dallas is where he lives, teaches, and makes his work. This exhibition is the city’s most comprehensive look at what he has built.

Plan Your Visit

The Crow Museum is free, always. It is one of the great cultural institutions in the Dallas Arts District, and this exhibition runs nearly a full year — plenty of time to bring the whole family, a first-time visitor, or just yourself on a quiet Tuesday afternoon.

Exhibition: Du Chau — Tracing the Threads of Memory Dates: April 4, 2026 through March 14, 2027 Location: Crow Museum of Asian Art, Dallas Arts District, 2010 Flora Street, Dallas, TX 75201 Hours: Tuesday through Sunday, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Admission: Free Phone: (972) 883-6430 Website: crowmuseum.org Facebook: Crow Museum of Asian Art Instagram: @crowmuseum

 

Marina Fatina

Marina Fatina

Part of Texas Epoch Media Group since 2012 . Graduated University of Houston with BA in Broadcast Journalism and now work as a local Houston Multimedia Journalist for The Texas Insider.

Related Posts

Your First Swim Lesson Is Free — and It Comes to You
Events

Your First Swim Lesson Is Free — and It Comes to You

May 4, 2026
The Longest Continuously Running Music Festival in America Is in Your Texas Backyard
Events

The Longest Continuously Running Music Festival in America Is in Your Texas Backyard

May 3, 2026
They Gave Everything — CBP Honors Families of the Fallen During National Police Week
Texas Family Values

They Gave Everything — CBP Honors Families of the Fallen During National Police Week

May 2, 2026

Latest

  • A Dallas Artist Turned Memory Into Porcelain — and the Result Is Breathtaking May 4, 2026
  • Your First Swim Lesson Is Free — and It Comes to You May 4, 2026
  • The Longest Continuously Running Music Festival in America Is in Your Texas Backyard May 3, 2026
  • They Gave Everything — CBP Honors Families of the Fallen During National Police Week May 2, 2026
  • Take Mom to a Museum This Mother’s Day — Texas Has Deals Worth Knowing About May 2, 2026

Trending Now

  • E21. Texas RoundUP: Interview with Lisa Marino-CEO at Dopple.com

    E21. Texas RoundUP: Interview with Lisa Marino-CEO at Dopple.com

    1158 shares
    Share 463 Tweet 290
  • Texas Trunk or Treat Events 2025 – Complete Directory

    1130 shares
    Share 452 Tweet 283
  • Texas Dad Advocates for Legal Changes to the Family Court System

    603 shares
    Share 241 Tweet 151
  • Texas Warrior Moms: Perla Muñoz Hopkins

    586 shares
    Share 234 Tweet 147
  • E4 Texas RoundUP: Exclusive Interview: Rob Scott, IT Attorney & Chief Innovator at Monjur

    392 shares
    Share 157 Tweet 98
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Careers
  • Contact
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Careers
  • Contact

© 2024 All rights Reserved. The Texas Insider.
The Texas Insider is a part of Epoch Media Group.

Facebook Instagram X-twitter Youtube
  • Insider Reports
  • Texas Border Crisis
  • Health & Fitness
  • Space & Metaphysics
  • Events
  • Texas Family Values
  • Insider Reports
  • Texas Border Crisis
  • Health & Fitness
  • Space & Metaphysics
  • Events
  • Texas Family Values