Cecile Chong | |
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Born | Cecile Chong 1964 Guayaquil, Ecuador |
Education |
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Known for | Painting, Drawing, Installation, Sculpture |
Awards | The Joan Mitchell MFA Grant (2011), EFA studio program (current) |
Website | https://www.cecilechong.com/ |
Cecile Chong is an American artist based in Brooklyn, New York, [1] whose work addresses the process of cultural assimilation and the development of individual identity. [2] For many years she has contributed to New York City public school art programs as a teaching artist. [3]
Cecile Chong was born in Guayaquil Ecuador.[ citation needed ] She went to China when she was 10, attending the Sacred Heart Conossian School in Macau, and then at 15 returned to Ecuador to attend the International section of the Colegio Americano High School in Quito.[ citation needed ] She came to New York City at age 19 to study art.[ citation needed ]
She studied studio art at Queens College, receiving a BA in 1988. She received a master's degree in art education at Hunter College in 1994.[ citation needed ] During graduate studies at the Parsons School of Design she was challenged to explore her own, genuine and constructive narrative, [1] receiving an MFA degree in 2008.
2015 - Time Collision - in the Project Room of BRIC Arts Media Chong presented an installation of Eastern and Western objects and images in landscape format mixing cultural incongruities. [4]
2018In Between Daylight, FiveMyles Gallery, Brooklyn NY [5] [6] consisted of a large wall installation of artificial and real flora with small guagua's facing it. and represents the risk, danger and beauty of the immigrant journey.
2017 - 2019El Dorado - The New Forty-niners is a New York City installation of many small swaddled baby (guagua) sculptures. Forty-nine percent of the figures are painted gold, representing the percentage of NYC households that speak a language other than English. Speaking to issues of immigration, the installation as such re-images a present-day wealthy metropolis. Sunset Park in Brooklyn was the first public park iteration as it travels to the five boroughs of NYC; Lewis Latimer House Museum in Flushing Queens was a second in 2018; [7] and a third appeared in the Bronx at a 2019 Wave Hill summer group show described as a multi-piece “guagua” sculptural installation and a tribute to New York City's immigrant populations. [8]
Solo exhibitions
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