blog

PRESS RELEASES

 
 

Press Release - "Poetry, After all" by Chelsea Wong

 

Chelsea Wong
”Work All Day, Warm Beach At Night”
Acrylic on canvas
60 x 60 inches
2020

 

pt. 2:
Poetry, After all
Chelsea Wong

Opening - February 13, 2021
Showing Through - Friday, March 2, 2021

Schedule a private viewing
info@part2gallery.com


pt. 2 Gallery is pleased to announce Poetry, After All, a solo exhibition of new paintings by San Francisco based artist Chelsea Ryoko Wong. For her first exhibition with the gallery, Wong presents scenes of social interaction and peaceful meditation through the use of vivid colors and layered compositions.


At the onset of the pandemic, Wong’s world was turned upside down. The artist, a fervently social being, found her world limited to her studio, her home, and her outdoor surroundings. As such, the people in her latest paintings occupy space in an entirely new manner. The body of work presented in Poetry, After All points to an evolution in composition for Wong, one that emphasizes landscape and interior space.


In the painting Work All Day, Warm Beach at Night small groups of people rest scattered across a beach, an homage to the coastlines of San Francisco and Marin. Nestled in small groups across the sand, figures sit playfully amongst themselves enjoying the apparent warmth of a brilliant sunset.  These small groups of people represent a social shift in Wong’s life, the openness of the outdoors paradoxically becoming the safest venue even for the most intimate of friends. As such, the bodies occupy drastically less space than Wong’s most well-known paintings, where closely knit people overlap and dance while occupying most of the picture plane. In Work All Day, Warm Beach at Night, the horizon splits the composition- the figures limited to the beach itself on the lower half of the canvas; the upper half, a blue to purple ombre accented by a moonrise. This divide  hints at an extended exploration of space in Wong’s painting, both in the embrace of negative space and the acceptance of linear perspective. 

 

Chelsea Wong
”A Modest Poetry Reading”
Acrylic on canvas
60 x 48 inches
2020

 

Looking at a more intimate work, the painting A Modest Poetry Reading presents an even greater shift for Wong, both in the dynamics between the subjects and in perspective and scale. Painted on a large canvas, two figures sit. The woman on the left sits in profile, reading to a woman facing forward, wearing goggles in a bathtub. Pushed to the front of the picture plane and displayed on top of a myriad of color and patterns, the two sitters could easily be understood to occupy different planes, if not for the interaction between them. The double portrait is a new subject for Wong, diverting the viewer’s attention to the individual rather than the collective. In rendering her subjects in such a new manner, Wong looks to art history for inspiration  - utilizing David Hockney’s understanding of intimacy in double portraits and Joan Brown’s use of space and geometry in relation to portraiture The bather’s homage to Joan Brown’s work is evident, soaking in a swimsuit and goggles. 


Across Wong’s paintings, whether densely populated or sparse, a utopic sense of joy and acceptance emanates from her work. People of every imaginable background mix and mingle creating joyful scenarios devoid of prejudice or exclusion. Wong presents worlds that exist  between the imaginary and real, a magical place that could be, not too far from reality.

 

Chelsea Wong
”Beauty is Everywhere”
Acrylic on canvas
60 x 48 inches
2020

 

Chelsea Ryoko Wong is a painter and muralist whose vibrant figure compositions reflect the diversity and style of her home in San Francisco. Through the use of watercolor, gouache and acrylic techniques, Wong creates busy scenes of co-mingling people drawing from real-life events and her imagination. Her work is known for celebrating racial and cultural diversity, promoting working class communities and evoking a sense of curiosity and wonder. Through heavily stylized and idyllic imagery, Wong creates an encouraging visual statement promoting joy, acceptance and openness to one another.

Wong began her studies at Parsons School of Design (New York, NY), and finished at California College of the Arts with a B.A. in Printmaking in 2010. She is the first recipient of the Hamaguchi Emerging Artists Fellowship award at Kala in Berkeley, CA (2010) and has recently completed a mural for the FB AIR Program in San Francisco, CA (2019). She has exhibited across the United States, Europe and Asia.