Martin Wong
- Introduction
- Martin Wong (July 11, 1946 – August 12, 1999) was a Chinese-American painter of the late 20th century. His work has been described as a meticulous blend of social realism and visionary art styles. Wong's paintings often explored multiple ethnic and racial identities, exhibited cross-cultural elements, demonstrated multilingualism, and celebrated his queer sexuality.
- Wikidata
- Q1522057
- Nationalities
- American, Chinese-American
- Gender
- Male
- Roles
- Artist, Ceramicist, Painter, Performance Artist
- Name
- Martin Wong
- Ulan
- 500043254
Exhibitions
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202: Downtown New York
Through spring 2021
MoMA
Collection gallery
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Stranger than Fiction: Art of Our Time
Feb 1–May 5, 2014
MoMA
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Contemporary Collection
Nov 16, 2011–Feb 9, 2014
MoMA
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CommuNYCations: Public Mirror: Artists Against Racial Prejudice
Sep 13–Oct 7, 1990
MoMA PS1
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The New Portrait
Apr 15–Jun 10, 1984
MoMA PS1
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Martin Wong has
6 exhibitionsonline.
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Martin Wong First letter home from New York (also I joined The Museum of Modern Art) 1978
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Martin Wong Stanton near Forsyth Street 1983
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Miguel Piñero, Betzaida Concepción, Eric Drooker, Andrew Castrucci, Day Gleeson, Paul Castrucci, Nadia Coën, Marguerite van Cook, Anton van Dalen, John Fekner, Avram Finkelstein, Vincent Gagliostro, Emily Carter, Tom McGlynn, Martin Wong, Lady Pink, Lee Quinones, Red David Rodriguez, James Romberger, Will Sales, Juan Sánchez, Sebastian Schroder, Walter Sipser, Dennis Thomas, Seth Tobocman, Bruce Witsiepe, David Wojnarowicz, Sabrina Jones, Various Artists Your House is Mine 1991. (Prints executed 1989-1991).
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