Exhibition: Between Heartlands / Kelly Wang

Exhibition: Between Heartlands / Kelly Wang


Kelly Wang combines contemporary and ancient influences, as well as American and Asian traditions, to create multimedia works infused with elements of cultural identity and personal sorrow. Landscapes of the heart revolve around places, persons, or events for which one feels a deep belonging. Such heartlands are creations of the mind, and being caught between two or more heartlands often generates tensions of identity or crisis.


For most Asian Americans there comes a realization that others may see them as different, as alien. Wang captures this moment in a group of mirrored cosmetic compacts; she covers the mirrors with paper into which she has burned words, revealing what others may see, think, or hate. Wang also plays with the calligraphy and landscape painting traditions of China in unfamiliar ways. Chinese characters are burned into paper, but the resulting texts are often illegible. In her Recluse Studio landscape series, she experiments with layers of resin infused with pigments that are manipulated using a blow torch. Supplying a near-transparent depth in which the pigments seem to flow, the initially malleable resin transmutes into a durable substance. Frozen, almost as if by alchemy, what emerges are heartscapes—places of safety away from the world’s hardships.


This sense of safety and belonging was shattered with Wang’s father’s death due to COVID-19. While her dad was in the hospital, she began twisting strips of newspaper and attaching them to canvas, creating images of scholar’s rocks (microcosms of immortal realms) and a map titled New York City (Microcosm 6)—the location of her grief.
The exhibition begins and ends with a painting of the Buddhist deity Guanyin, the Bodhisattva of Compassion, who represents a place of infinite grace between heartlands.

 

Cary Y. Liu
Nancy and Peter Lee Curator of Asian Art

 

Princeton University Art Museum   Winter 2022 Magazine

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