Friday, March 25, 2022

Ching-chih Yee, Artist and Teacher

1936

Ching-chih Yee was born on November 5, 1900, in Hangchow, China. The birth information is from her Chinese Exclusion Act case file, naturalization card and the Social Security Death Index. 

A document dated October 6, 1936, from the Chinese Consulate in Vancouver, British Columbia said Yee was a teacher in Shanghai from 1934 to 1936. The American Consulate General, in Vancouver, B.C., produced an investigative letter, dated October 21, 1936, which said
Miss Yee came to Canada in July, 1936, to display Chinese exhibits at the Chinese Carnival at Vancouver, which was part of the Jubilee program. She has been invited to display these exhibits at the Centennial Central Exposition at Dallas, Texas. She plans to visit various cities in the United States at the close of the Exposition and expects to return to China in March, 1937. The Vancouver Jubilee Committee will provide her return passage to China.
Yee departed Vancouver, aboard the Canadian Pacific Steamship Princess Kathleen, on October 22, 1936. In Seattle, Washington, she was admitted as a visitor the next day. For the next ten years, Yee was granted a series of temporary admission extensions. 

From Seattle, Yee traveled to Dallas. The Texas Centennial Exposition ran from June 6 to November 29, 1936. At the end of the exposition, Yee made her way to New York. Newsweek, December 5, 1938, said she lived in New York beginning January 8, 1937. 

An early sighting of Yee was noted in the Brooklyn Daily Eagle, March 20, 1937. She and artist Chu H. Jor attended the opening of the Frank Crowninshield collection of African Negro Sculpture at the Brooklyn Museum. 

Yee was profiled in the New York Sun, November 24, 1937. 


Chinese Woman Art Professor Teaches Ancient Scroll Painting to New Yorkers
Miss Ching Chih Yee, From Shanghai Art College, Is No Modern—She Goes Back Thousands of Years for Her Precedents.

One of China’s few women professors of painting is reviving the ancient art of the T’angs and the Sungs and the Mings in New York. At 175 Canal street in the Chinese Art Club, Miss Ching Chih Yee opened her first class this week in the art of Chinese scroll painting.

She is doing just what she has been doing in Shanghai for the last five years. She was the only woman professor of Chinese painting in the Shanghai Art College, until she left Shanghai nine months ago. She came to this country at the request of a group of overseas Chinese, to exhibit her work in Vancouver and in Dallas, Texas. Now she has decided to stay in New York until the World’s Fair, where she hopes to hang her scrolls in 1939. Meanwhile, she paints in the mornings, studies English in the afternoon, and teaches Chinese art on two evenings a week.

Her English at the moment is hesitant. It trails off into Mandarin every once in a while. But with the aid of Mr. Chu H. Jor, president of the Chinese Art Club, and in a combination of Mandarin, Shanghai dialect, Cantonese, and English, she told her story yesterday, over cups of tea which she had brewed on the old fashioned gas stove in the corner of her one and a half room apartment at 425 Second avenue.

Not a Modernist.

She paints in the ancient tradition. There are modernists, in China, but she is not one of them. She learned from her grandfather, her father, and her brothers, all of whom were artists.

She prefers her T’ang and her Sung dynasties to any others, but she also paints in the style of the Ming and the Ching dynasties. It depends upon her mood and her subject.

“Here,” she explained, “are two different ones, but both are Sung.” She brought two scrolls, each neatly tied with dark blue tape. from her closet and unrolled them. “This one has lines, squares ... you see?” She pointed to the rather bold outlines of the picture. “But this one is …” she struggled for a word and finally, to illustrate what she meant she sighed very audibly. It was, too, a picture of sighs, with faint washes forming waves and undulating clouds.

She does not paint on an easel. She paints on a flat table. For her minute work she sits down and works close to her picture, as though she were writing. For pictures with bold outlines and little detail she stands up and paints at arm’s length. 

Miss Yee is short and round and rather slow moving. She is calm. Her hands lie still in her lap when she is not talking or painting. Her hands grow expressive when she is talking, because she must illustrate  the words which she cannot remember in English.

Center of Culture.

She is worried about the future of Chinese culture because of what has happened in Peiping and Shanghai. Previously, Peiping was the center of culture for China,” Miss Yee explained through the interpreter. “Then it was Shanghai. For the last ten years there has  been great interest in ancient painting in Shanghai. Nearly 2,000 art students have come from all the provinces of China to study it. But now, if Japan is in command, what will happen to our Chinese culture?” Many art works, she fears, have been destroyed in the bombings. Her own, she has heard, are safe in the French concession.

Miss Yee has never painted from a life model She learned by copying the old masters. She spent weeks, for example, painting hands in every style and position in which hands appeared on the old scrolls. 

Scrolls Give Variety.

Miss Yee not only loves the painting of the Chinese ancients, but she believes that the painting of pictures on scrolls makes for more enjoyment of art. “One week you can have all Mings. The next week you have all Sungs,” she said. Chinese collectors, she sats, change the pictures on their walls every week, because the scroll are so easily handled.

To her first New York class in Chinese painting this week, four Americans came. One of them had expected a lecture. And, said Miss Yee, “he was very surprised when he was given a Chinese brush and some Chinese ink.” But she hopes that she can keep him at it, now that he has started.
The December 1937 issue of Chinese Digest said
N.Y. Art Club Starts Painting Class
New York City — The Chinese Art club, 175 Canal street, which has sponsored many cultural and art activities among the Chinese here, has recently embarked on another activity which promises to bring out art talent and appreciation of Chinese art among Chinese and Americans alike.

This new activity is the engagement of Miss Yee Ching-chih, professor of Chinese painting at the Shanghai Art college. As instructor of Chinese art, Miss Yee has started a class in Chinese painting at the art club’s studios. Classes are being held three times a week, and a limited number of American students may be enrolled.

The Chinese Art club, in announcing this class, said, “This is the first time that such an opportunity to study Chinese art under an experienced native teacher … has ever been made possible in New York.”

This organization is now in its third year of existence and is about the most active one of its kind in the country. Last June it sponsored the first Chinese children’s art exhibition in America which attracted wide attention among American educators and art critics (Chinese Digest for July, 1937, p. 13). The club has an annual membership exhibition, sponsors native plays, and opens its studios for cultural gatherings of all kinds. Its present president is Moowee Tiam.
Yee’s classes were mentioned in Art Digest, December 1, 1937. 
A Class in Chinese Painting: A studio class in Chinese painting is to be conducted by Miss Yee Ching Chih, professor of Chinese Painting at Shanghai Art College, while on her visit to America. At the Chinese Art Club, 175 Canal Street, New York, evening classes will be held three times a week.
The Chinese Digest, March 1938, reported the upcoming New York Chinese Art Club’s exhibition.
Art Club to Hold Painting and Photography Exhibits
New York—The Chinese Art club here will hold its third annual exhibit of paintings and sculpture at the club’s gallery, 175 Canal street, beginning March 1 and extending through March 25. 

The exhibit will include works by Miss Yee Ching-chih, Jack Chen, Chu H. Jor, Kailuen Eng, Moowee Tiam, Tschai Lenzene, Howard Low, and others. Guest exhibitors will include Neysa McNein, Oronzio Maladrelli, Guy Maccoy, Dimitri Romanovesky, and others. 
Beginning April 1 and extending through April 15 the Chinese Art club will hold its second photographic salon. Prints for showing may be submitted by any Chinese in any part of the country, and may be of any size, but must be mounted. Submission of prints must be made on or before March 25, announced W. Yukon, in charge of this exhibit. All pictures submitted will be returned in their original wrappings to the senders after the close of the exhibition.
The New York Times, March 3, 1938, reviewed the exhibition.
The Chinese Art Club’s third annual exhibition was opened to the public yesterday at its galleries, 175 Canal Street. A sign at the entrance announced that the show was dedicated to “the Chinese struggle against Japanese aggression.”

There was little sign of that struggle, however, in the exhibition itself. War scenes were outnumbered by still-lifes by more than two to one. Only five of the fifty-two pictures dealt with the war, and one of these was contributed by Neysa McMein, one of the eight non-Chinese artists exhibiting. 

The most ambitious of the war scenes was K.L. Eng’s painting of a refugee family. It showed a husband and wife fleeing with four children. The other war scenes were all small. They included a drawing of a woman volunteer, by Jack Chen; a wood engraving of a Chinese soldier encouraging men behind him, by Li Chun, and a water-color of a refugee, by Moowee Tiam, the club’s president. 

The rest of the show was made up of pictures of fruits and flowers, pastoral landscapes and peaceful studies of people. And there was little evidence that all but ten of the works were by Chinese artists. Miss Yee Ching-chih’s three pictures and Harry Wong’s landscape were the only ones in the tradition of Chinese painting.

The exhibition will be open until March 25.
In 1938, The Magic Spear, and Other Stories of China’s Famous Heroes was published by Random House. Louise Crane’s stories featured full-page drawings by Yench’i Tiao T’u and decorations by Yee (below). The book was designed by Evelyn Harter


Horseback rider was taken from a drawing by Yench’i Tiao T’u.






Yee’s gallery show was highlighted in the New York Sun, November 19, 1938.


Paintings in Ancient Manner
Miss Ching Chih Yee’s Work in Divers [sic] Mediums at Tonying Galleries.
The Tonying Gallery, where exhibitions of rare ancient Chinese paintings are often shown, has hung a collection  of contemporary paintings by Miss Ching Chih Yee.

At the preview at 5 East Fifty-seventh street last Saturday, little Miss Yee, in a mixture of Chinese, French and English—the Chinese interpreted by one of her countrymen—told of the great revival in the last ten years of interest in China in the style of painting developed by the “ancients.” She said she had taught painting in China for the last five years, and was the only woman professor of Chinese painting in the Shanghai Art College until she left there nine months ago.

She has made an intensive study of the old Chinese masters under the tutelage of her grandfather, her father and her brothers—all artists. Her exhibition is the first of its kind in New York city, a contemporary Chinese artist painting in the old manner.

Sixteen paintings are shown. Six, in ink and paper, are after the manner of the Sung artists—960-1277. Outstanding among these is the beautifully composed “Prunus,” with strength and simplicity in the rendition of branch and twig structure, studded with blossoms. Miss Yee commented that it represented spring, as “Orchid,” with its long flower sprays, suggests summer. This was one of the favorite subjects of the Yuan masters (1260-1341) such as the great Chao Meng-fu. “Chrysanthemum” and “Bamboo,” typifying autumn and winter, show a more rugged brush stroke than is usually looked for in the old work. Miss Yee’s painting is entirely free from Occidental influence.

“Summer Landscape” and “Winter Landscapes” are the other two in ink on paper, the artist herself, by the way, stating that her preference is for this black and white. Nevertheless, she gets extraordinarily authentic, delicate effects in the old manner using color on silk. One of these, “A Poetess,” shows a large single figure, leaning slightly on a rock on which lies her ink slab. She holds in one hand a red leaf and in the other her brush. The pale pink garment and full white skirt with elaborated knotted long blue cord girdle portray the costume of the Tang period (618-906).

There are ten paintings in color, seven of which are on silk, the other three on paper.
According to the New York, New York Marriage License Index, at Ancestry.com, Yee and Arthur Chor Jhen obtained a license on March 7, 1940. They married on March 9 in Manhattan. Her residence was 425 Second Avenue. Jhen was a contractor who lived at 101 East 116 Street. Five weeks later the newlyweds were counted in the 1940 U.S. Federal Census. They lived at 101 East 116 Street. Yee’s occupation was not stated. 

The New York Sun, March 22, 1941, reported the group show of Chinese artists. 
Chinese Exhibit Decorative Art
Relief Work to Profit by Ritz Tower Show.
Decorative modern Chinese painting fills a gallery in the “Art for ” show at the Ritz-Tower until April 5. C. F. Tau and C. T. Loo, experts on Chinese art, and Prof. George F. Rowley of Princeton, constitute, with Mrs. Carleton S. Cooke, the chairman, the committee. There are approximately one hundred examples. Accordingly to Mr. Yau, this is the first time well-known Chinese artists in this country have exhibited together.

Miss Mai-Mai-Sze, pretty daughter of the former Chinese Ambassador to Washington, who studied in Paris and London and is a graduate of Wellesley, shows an oil, “Eumenides,” a mystical conception of cloud forms resolving into two heads, and two bright-colored watercolors, illustrations for Balinese folktales. Kwan-ye-Chang of Canton, who has served as a war nurse in China, has a group of watercolors, some on silk, some on paper, with some watercolors by her father, a shaggy pony, peony and butterfly, fish, birds in flight, cicadas among grasses, and similar subjects. Miss Ching-chih Yee, who was a professor in the College of Art at Shanghai, has a series, representing the twelve months. Ann Yutseng Hsi, daughter of the general director of the Central Bank of China, has two bright-colored modern watercolors of children at play, and two old-style hanging scroll paintings.
Yee’s Christmas tree appeared in the Brooklyn Eagle, December 21, 1941. 

Art News, November 15–30, 1942, said Yee was one of the fine artists chosen to create designs for Castleton China, Inc. Ma Lin was the name of Yee’s line of dinnerware. 

Beginning in 1947, advertisements for Ma Lin appeared in numerous newspapers and magazines including House Beautiful, House & Garden, Living for Young Homemakers and Sunset



The Evening Star (Washington, DC), December 10, 1947, reported the following. 
Two Chinese Versions of Christian Art to Be Presented C.U.
Two Chinese interpretations of Christian art, painted with imperial Chinese colors 300 years old which will remain bright and true for 1,000 years to come, will be presented to Catholic University Sunday by Mme. Ching-Chih Yee, internationally known Chinese artists.

Presentation of the art works—“Our Lady of Refugees” and “The Good Shepherd”—will be at 4 p.m. in the Mullen Library, under joint auspices of the University and the Institute of Chinese Culture.

Ambassador Koo to Speak.

Speakers will be Archbishop Paul Yu-Pin, of Nanking, Chinese Ambassador Wellington Koo, and the Right Rev. Msgr. Edward B. Jordan, vice rector of the university.

The ceremony will be attended by well-known figures of Washington’s art colony, prominent churchmen and educators, officers of the institute and Catholic University faculty members. Following the presentation the university will honor Mme. Yee at a tea.

Mme. Yee, who is from a distinguished family of artists, spent two years in painting the interpretations. Born in Hanchow, she is said to be one of the few contemporary Chinese artists who remains free from Occidental influences, and her paintings have been described as being unsurpassed for purity of Chinese conception and distinctive Chinese technique.

Art Exhibition on Tour.

Mme. Yee is the founder and director of Shanghai’s Chinese Women’s Art Society. Two volumes of her paintings, published in Shanghai in 1936, are well known in China.

During a world tour in 1937 her works were shown at international exhibitions in Canada and in France, and later throughout the United States. She was twice invited by the Brooklyn Museum to demonstrate her distinctive Chinese technique to art students. In 1934 her paintings were exhibited in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.

Mme. Yee also is the founder of the New York Chinese Art Club.
In a follow-up story, the Evening Star, December 28, 1947, said 
Two Chinese interpretations of Christian art. “Our Lady of Refugees” and “The Good Shepherd,” recently were presented to Catholic University by the internationally known artist, Mme. Ching-Chih Yee, under joint auspices of Catholic University and the Institute of Chinese Culture.

Mme. Yee worked for two years on these paintings, using imperial Chinese colors 300 years old, which will remain bright and true for 1,000 years to come. Born in Hanchow, she comes from a distinguished family of artists. She is one of the few contemporary Chinese artists who remain free from Occidental influences. Her work is noted for purity of Chinese conception and distinctive Chinese technique.

Mme. Yee is the founder and director of Shanghai's Chinese Women’s Art Society. She also founded the New York Chinese Art Club. During a world tour in 1937, her works were shown at international exhibitions in France and Canada, and later in the United States. She was invited by the Brooklyn Museum to demonstrate Chinese technique to art students. Earlier, some of her work was exhibited at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City.
In 1949 Castleton China introduced the “Museum Shape” dinnerware. Yee’s pattern was called Mandalay



Yee’s “Moon Goddess” plaque was part of the exhibition of Castleton China plates and plaques by seventeen artists as reported by the Milwaukee Journal, (Wisconsin), April 15, 1949. “Moon Goddess” was included in the Castleton China Collection by Contemporary Artists traveling exhibition which began in New York, September 1949 and continued into 1950. Among the artists represented were Picasso, Salvadore Dali, Stuart Davis, Modigliani, John Marin, Thomas Hart Benton and Georges Braque.


On January 25, 1954, Yee, as Lily Yee Jhen, became a naturalized citizen according to the New York Index to Petitions for Naturalization at Ancestry.com. Her husband was naturalized on May 25, 1959.


Yee’s show at Argent gallery was noted in Art News, April 1955, and Art Digest, April 1, 1955. 

The 1959 Manhattan, New York telephone directory listed Yee and her husband’s residence at 549 West 123rd Street.


A mid-1960s issue of 中外畫報 (Chinese and Foreign Pictorial) said 
Miss Ching-Chih Yee Prints New Painting Album
Miss Ching-Chih Yee, a classical Chinese painter in New York, recently published the third and fourth albums of her artistic studies. 

The new publications as addenda to the first two books printed in Shanghai in 1936 contain a selection of her work completed in Canada and the U.S.A. in the last three decades, and several other noted painters all commended her highly for what she had achieved.

Miss Yee crossed the Pacific Ocean in the early years of the Sino-Japanese war. Under the sponsorship of overseas Chinese in Canada, she attended the fiftieth anniversary of Vancouver exhibiting her work and demonstrating classical Chinese painting. She also participated in the centennial celebration of Dallas in Texas.

She has since settled down in New York teaching painting in colleges and in private. During these years, she has held several exhibitions in New York, Boston, Chicago and other cities. 

The St. John’s University in Jamaica, New York, last year presented her a president’s medal for lier contribution in the promotion of cultural cooperation between the Republic of China and the United States.
The Paintings of Ching-Chih Yee Number 3 and Number 4 were self-published circa 1965. 

Cover for Numbers 3 and 4

Letter accompanying the two volumes

Number 3
Page 1: Foreword (in Chinese) by Prof. Chang Dai-Chien
Page 2: Foreword (in Chinese) by Y.Y. Pan
Page 3: Foreword (in Chinese) by Dr. C.P. Cheng
Page 4: Foreword
Miss Ching-chih Yee is one of the few contemporary Chinese artists whose training and technique are firmly rooted in the past and who are not influenced by western art. Her paintings have been widely exhibited in the United States. These include twice inclusions in the exhibits of Chinese art in the Metropolitan Museum of New York, one-man exhibitions in New York, Boston and Chicago in the last two decades, and a tour of her paintings in the United States under the auspices of the American Federation of Art in 1943. For about thirty years, she has been a resident of the United States. 

We are fortunate in having preserved here some of her best achievements. One of her best, “The Prunus” is not here. But some of her best distinctly are, including the landscape a la Mi Fei, the copy of Chou Fang of Tang Dynasty (“Ladies at Embroidery”) and the copy of the Yuan master Ch’ien Hsuan (“Insects”), which are in my possession. A reproduction on a reduced scale hardly does justice to the fineness of her work in “Insects” or to her antique coloring in “Ladies at Embroidery”. On the whole, she excels in fine details of the type known as the “Northern School”, but this collection gives a good view of the favorite themes of Chinese art, including the supreme view of a misty river scene. Miss Yee does not go for free, bold strokes of the literati school of painting, but the true Chinese feeling for nature and its various objects is unmistakably there.
Lin Yutang
June 30, 1965, New York
Page 5: Foreword
Miss Ching-chih Yee comes from a family which for three generations has loved and cultivated the art of drawing and painting. 

Having received her early artistic training from her father and elder brother, she has sought to broaden her education by studying under several well-known masters.

From childhood onward, she has been a most methodical and diligent worker, seeking always to perfect her technique in all its phases and details.

Very few Chinese artists of her generation have undergone such a thorough and disciplined training as she has.

Miss Yee is one of the very few contemporary painters who have remained free from the influences of Occidental painting. 

Her works represent Chinese drawing and painting in their truest tradition and best technique.
Hu Shih
Page 6: Introduction (in Chinese)
Page 7: Biography
Miss Ching-Chih Yee
Miss Yee is a descendant of a family of artists. Her grandfather, father and bothers were all artists, and she has been painting and writing poetry ever since she was a young girl. She started teaching painting when she was still under twenty. Born in beautiful and romantic Hangchow, she has had a rich background. Her native city was famous through the centuries for its great painters, poets, and scholars who made it their home, situated by one of the most beautiful lakes (West Lake) in the world, dotted with tiny islands, pavilion crowned; the monasteries and temples rich in legends and stories, and the brilliant and artistic memories of the court of the Sung Dynasty. 

Miss Yee taught art for five years at the Shanghai Art College where she was the only woman professor of Chinese painting. She was the founder and one of the directors of the Chinese Women’s Art Society in Shanghai. Her work has been widely exhibited in China. At the request of a group of Chinese in this country, Miss Yee came here in the Spring of 1937 to exhibit. Her paintings were shown at the International Exhibitions at Vancouver and at Dallas in the same year, and in New York at the Tonying Chinese Art Gallery, 5 East 57th Street, in November 1938. Soon after her arrival in New York City, she began to give lessons in Chinese pinging at the Chinese Art Club, and she has also had many private pupils, both Chinese and American. She has had equal success in decoration. She painted a beautiful series of four murals, landscape in color, representing the four seasons of the year, for one of New York’s loveliest homes. She was twice invited by the Brooklyn Museum to demonstrate her painting to the art students. She has also designed porcelain in the Chinese manner for the Castleton China, Inc. in a series, contributed to by such outstanding American artists as Thomas Henry Benton, and others. Her designs and the finished ware were exhibited in the Winter of 1942 in New York, and in the Spring of 1943 in Boston, Chicago and other cities. Her paintings were exhibited at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in January and February, 1943, and the Pennsylvania Museum of Art in March and April, 1943. In the Autumn of 1943, her paintings were exhibited in many cities in the United States under the auspices of the American Federation of art. On many occasions in the past 20 years, her paintings were exhibited in various places in the United States in conjunction with the works of other artists. She had two private exhibits in New York City in 1955, one was in China Institute in America and the other in Tonying and Co., Inc. Her latest private exhibit was in China House in New York City, November 2, 1964.
Page 8: photograph of Ching-Chih Yee


Page 9: Titles of art (in Chinese)
Page 10: Contents and titles of art (black-and-white plates unless noted otherwise) 

The Madonna

Pages 11–40: “Jesus the Son of God” (color); “The Madonna” (color); certificate from Catholic University of America, Washington, DC, December 14, 1947 (color); “Kwan Yin, the Goddess of Mercy”; “A Chinese Trick”; “Landscape”; “Eagle and Pine”; “Chrysanthemum and the Cock”; “Butterflies No. 1”; “Butterflies No. 2”; “Eight Poets, No. 1: Ho Chih-Chang”; “Eight Poets, No. 2: Wang Ju-Yang”; “Eight Poets, No. 3: Li Shih-Chih”; “Eight Poets, No. 4: Chun Chung-Chih”; “Sword Dance”; “Meandering”; “Landscape No. 1”; “Landscape No. 2”; “Ten Spring Flowers No. 1”; “Ten Spring Flowers No. 2”; “Feast of the Moon Goddesses”; “Chinese Pavilion at the New York World’s Fair 1964–65” (color); “Spring Flowers”; “Ladies of the Court No. 1, inscription by Chang Dai-Chien”; “Ladies of the Court No. 2”; “Ladies of the Court No. 3”; “Ladies of the Court No. 4”; “Ladies of the Court No. 5”; “Ladies of the Court No. 6”, inscription by Dr. Lin Yutang; “Flowers and Bird”; “Flowers and Insects”

Number 4
Page 1: Titles of art (in Chinese)
Page 2: Contents and titles of art (black-and-white plates unless noted otherwise) 

Needlework

Emperor Flying to the Moon

Pages 3–40: “Needlework” (color); “Landscape”; “Lotus and Mandarin Duck”; “Trees and Birds in Chills of Autumn”; “Landscape No. 1”; “Landscape No. 2”; “Landscape No. 3”; “Eight Poets, No. 5: Su Chin”; “Eight Poets, No. 6: Li Pai”; “Eight Poets, No. 7: Chang Hsu”; “Eight Poets, No. 8: Chiao Sui”; “The Emperor’s Concubine Drinking”; “Insects–Scroll No. 1: Inscription by Prof. Chang Dai Chien”; “Insects–Scroll No. 2”; “Insects–Scroll No. 3”; “Emperor Flying to the Moon” (color); “Roses and Birds”; “Autumn Flowers and Insects”; “Landscape”; “Lady of the Court”; “Spring Flowers”; “Summer Flowers”; “Autumn Flowers”; “Winter Flowers”; “Goddess go Yang Tai-Chen”; “Golden Thread–Scroll No. 1: Plants and Insects”; “Golden Thread–Scroll No. 2: Plants and Insects”; “Golden Thread–Scroll No. 3: Inscription by Celebrities”; “Golden Thread–Scroll No. 4: Inscription by Celebrities”; “Four Flowers and Fruit with Insects”; “Flowers with Insects”; “Lady Grieving for Passing of Spring”; “Goddess of Longevity”; “Wang You-Chun Visiting His Teacher” (color); “New Year’s Flowers”; “Four Flowers and Birds”; “Pine Tree and Chrysanthemums with White Cranes”; “Flowers and Bird” (color)

The St. Luke’s Hospital Center 1974 Annual Report listed Yee and her husband as contributors in the $100 to $500 range. 

Yee passed away in February 1980 according to the Social Security Death Index which said her last residence was New York City.


Further Reading and Viewing
Google Arts and Culture, photograph of Ching-chih Yee painting
Asian American Art: A History 1850–1970  (2008), No-Yong Park studied under Ching-chih Yee 



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