Fay Chong

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Fay Chong painting on beach, La Push, Washington, ca. 1961. Wing Luke Asian Museum Photograph Collection. Photo: Martin Moyer.

Fay Chong (1912 - 1973) was a Chinese-American artist, active in the Pacific Northwest, well known for his printmaking and watercolor painting. He was also known for his activities as an arts organizer and educator.

Life and career

Fay Chong was born in Canton (modern Guangzhou), China in 1912, and moved to Seattle with his family in 1920. He attended public school, and studied art with Hannah Jones at Broadway High School, along with classmates Morris Graves and George Tsutakawa. He studied traditional calligraphy techniques during return visits to China in 1929 and 1935.[1]

In 1933, Chong, Andrew Chinn, Lawrence Yun, Yippie Eng, and others formed the Chinese Arts Club. Initially an informal co-op, they began holding regular shows at a shared studio in Seattle's International District, and eventually exhibited as an arts collective at the New York Chinese School. Artists Guy Anderson and William Cumming - who, along with Graves and Mark Tobey, would later become prominent members of the 'Northwest School' - were regular guests, joining them on art-making field excursions.[2]

Cannery Buildings, 1936, b&w block print by Fay Chong.

In 1938, during the Great Depression, Morris Graves helped Chong find work as an artist with the Federal Art Project of the Works Project Administration. He worked with the WPA, off and on, until 1942, mainly making linocut prints for various federal buildings and public places. He also became interested in watercolor painting at this time.[3]

After the WPA, Chong worked various jobs, including several years at a YMCA school. In the mid-1950s - already a well-known, nationally exhibited "WPA artist" - he enrolled at the University of Washington, studying under Mark Tobey and others. He earned his B.A. in 1968, and M.A. in arts education in 1971.[2] He taught art at Cornish College of the Arts, Seattle Central College, Washington Senior High School, and Ingraham High School.[4]

George Town Farm, 1939 watercolor by Fay Chong.

His artwork fused traditional Chinese styles with American Regionalism and other modern developments. His later work incorporated elements of Abstract expressionism. His art has been exhibited at the Seattle Art Museum, the Frye Art Museum, the Zoe Dusanne Gallery, and the Francine Seders Gallery in Seattle; the Tacoma Art Museum, the Bellevue Arts Museum, Reed College in Portland, Oregon, the Santa Barbara Museum of Art in California, the Riverside Gallery in New York City, and in many other museums and galleries.[2] He was a member of the arts organizations Northwest Printmakers (treasurer and president), the Northwest Watercolor Society (president), the Puget Sound Group of Painters, and the Washington Art Association.[1]

Chong was married to artist Priscilla Hwang.[2] The two of them exhibited together at the annual Bellevue Arts and Crafts Fair for many years.[5]

Fay Chong died of a stroke in 1973.[4]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Preliminary Guide to the Fay Chong Papers, circa 1933-1976; University Libraries, University of Washington; http://digital.lib.washington.edu/findingaids/view?docId=ChongFay2574.xml retvd 6 12 14
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Hallmark, Kara Kelley; Encyclopedia of Asian American Artists: Artists of the American Mosaic. Greenwood, 2007; ISBN 031333451X
  3. Oral history interview with Fay Chong, by Dorothy Bestor, 1965 Feb. 14-20; Smithsonian Archive of the Arts; http://www.aaa.si.edu/collections/interviews/oral-history-interview-fay-chong-12344 retvd 6 12 14
  4. 4.0 4.1 Seattle Public Library - Special Collections online; Fay Chong, biographical notes; http://cdm200301.cdmhost.com/cdm/singleitem/collection/p15015coll5/id/42/rec/3 retvd 6 12 14
  5. Cumming, William; Sketchbook: A Memoir of the 1930s and the Northwest School; University of Washington Press, 1984/2005. ISBN 0295985607