The neon-lit tenderness of the motorcycle in Wong Kar-wai ’s film Fallen Angels has grown to be one of the most iconic shots in modern cinema. The scene captures a melancholic romanticism as Michelle Reis and Takeshi Kaneshiro’s characters become one with the bike that carries them forward, bodies folded atop one another. In Fallen Angels , Tra My Nguyen tells a story of memory and movement.

Taking title cues from the cult-classic neo-noir film, Nguyen draws urban poetry from diasporic perspectives for her new solo exhibition at GROTTO. The Berlin-based artist reimagines her childhood spent in Vietnam in a series of distorted vignettes, where mobility, body politics, and gender collide in the streets of Hanoi. With a practice encompassing textile, video, and sculpture, Nguyen rethinks material culture in a new light.

A post shared by TRA MY NGUYEN (@tra.my1) Much of the show’s work takes after Vietnamese motor cultures, where women adorn their bodies in clashing hues of floral print. “Riders’ Arc” positions a motorbike draped in such sun-protective materials.

“Their generic floral patterns and easy-to-wear style moves quickly from design to vendors, relentlessly meeting the latest trends and exaggerating notions of mass-production,” Brooke Wilson writes in a gallery statement. “The garments engage both literally and metaphorically with notions of speed: skirts clip and wrap-around at the waist. Jackets zip all the way up to the head – fast, quick, and easy.