January 30 – February 29, 1992
Taipei Gallery
McGraw-Hill Building
1221 Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY 10021-1579
(click image to enlarge)
(Next post on Friday: Li Ling Ai in the Censuses, Passenger Lists, Immigration Files, and City Directories)
Famous, forgotten, well-known, and obscure visual artists of Chinese descent in the United States
Friday, February 16, 2018
Friday, February 9, 2018
Anna May Wong in Universal Weekly
page 12 article
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(Next post on Friday: Chinese New Year Prints)
Friday, February 2, 2018
Yun Gee in California History
Summer 1993
On the cover: Yun Gee (1906–1963), The Flute Player (or Self Portrait), 1928, oil on canvas, 23 x 19 in. One of the early San Francisco Modernists, Yun Gee came to San Francisco from China in 1921. A student at the California School of Fine Arts, he was a founding member of the avant-garde Modern Gallery. Gee also established the Chinese Revolutionary Artists Club, where he later taught art. His San Francisco works were often bold, cubist-inspired street scenes and landscapes. In 1927, Gee moved to Paris for the first of two residencies there, and then settled permanently in New York, where his daughter, the artist Li-lan, resides. One of Gee’s paintings is owned by the Oakland Museum.
(Next post on Friday: Anna May Wong in Universal Weekly)