Showing posts with label Calligrapher. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Calligrapher. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 3, 2024

Russell Eng Gon, Calligrapher

1976 Indicator
Stuyvesant High School
New York, New York

















Barbara Aria
Calligraphy by Russell Eng Gon
Simon & Schuster, 1991


















Barbara Aria with Russell Eng Gon
Calligraphy by Russell Eng Gon
Chronicle Books, 1992
















Barbara Aria
Calligraphy by Russell Eng Gon
Illustrations by Lesley Ehlers
Chronicle Books, 2001




Friday, February 18, 2022

Calligrapher Kenneth Joe

The title calligraphy for Eight Immortal Flavors was by Kenneth Joe who was thanked in the book’s preface, “to Kenneth Joe for the fine calligraphy”. The cover art was painted by Jake Lee

Jacket Cover





















Title Page





















It’s likely Joe did the calligraphy for the restaurant, Kan’s



















A photograph of Joe, I believe, was published in Preserving America’s Past (National Geographic Society, 1983). The caption on page 98 reads 
Silk-clad scholar Kenneth Joe nurtures his centuries-old heritage in an Oriental setting. In Chinese calligraphy, he brushes a poem of homesickness and of time and changing seasons. 
Pages 100 and 101 featured Joe practicing his art. 

Anyone with biographical information to share about Joe would be greatly appreciated. 


(Next post on Friday: Maxine Hong Kingston’s China Men)

Friday, October 18, 2019

Wang Fangyu, Calligrapher

February 2, 1913, Beijing, China – October 6, 1997, New York, New York

Wang Fangyu’s birth date is from the Social Security Death Index. His Social Security application said his father was Wu T. Wang and mother Shu C. Chu.

The following travel information is at Ancestry.com.

On June 2, 1944, Wang sailed aboard the steamship General H. W. Butner from Bombay, India. He was a student going to the Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C. His wife was Wang Ya who resided in Beijing at 12 Sawatze. Wang arrived in Los Angeles, California on July 1, 1944.











Wang was a passenger on China National Aviation Corporation’s inauguration flight, October 6, 1947, from Shanghai, China. The plane landed in Honolulu, Hawaii to refuel then continued on to San Francisco, California, where it landed on October 7.



















Wang was a resident of New Haven, Connecticut when he flew on the Flying Tiger Line from New York. The plane departed July 17, 1951 and was destined for Luxembourg.

Wang was naturalized on July 24, 1953 by the U.S. District Court at New Haven, Connecticut. His address was 3 Woodbine Street, Hamden, Connecticut.

Aboard Japan Air Lines, Wang flew from San Francisco on November 26, 1954, bound for Tokyo.

From Tokyo, Wang departed January 31, 1955, on Pan American World Airways bound for San Francisco.

New Haven, Connecticut city directories, for 1963 and 1965, listed Wang as an instructor residing at 425 Norton Parkway.

Wang passed away October 6, 1997 in New York City. An obituary was published in The New York Times on October 11.


Books and Exhibitions

Walking to Where the River Ends
1980



















Dancing Ink
1984-1992


































































































Gallery 456















Master of the Lotus GardenThe Life and Art of Bada Shanren (1626-1705)
Yale University Press, 1990























The Calligraphy of Wang Fangyu
.J. Wender Gallery
February 1991

















Romance of the Stone: Chinese Seal Engraving
China Institute in America
December 1992


















Related Post
Artists: 80 Plus and Going Strong


(Next post on Friday: Asian American Film Festival and Asian American International Film Festival)