- Marlene Tseng Yu
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Marlene Tseng Yu (born 1937, in Taiwan) is an Asian American artist known for her mural-sized, nature-inspired, abstract expressionist paintings. She has exhibited her “Forces of Nature” series extensively in Europe, Asia, and North America. She is founder of the Rainforest Art Foundation.
Contents
Biography
Yu graduated from National Taiwan Normal University. She then went to the University of Colorado at Boulder for her master’s degree in fine arts, and then taught at University of Denver. Her first televised interview was given by Barbara Walters on The Today Show.
Her dual-hemispheric education allowed her to synthesize Chinese painting and Abstract Expressionism, experiment with acrylic paint and develop her own brush techniques on canvas and paper, with nature as her inspiration.[1]
Her main theme is the “Forces of Nature,” in which she hopes "to capture the spirit of the universe, its rhythm and movements, its quiet and angry moods, its colors and forms...” in natural phenomena such as avalanches, geysers, coral reefs, calving glaciers, black holes, stalagmite formation, amber resin, Aspen leaves and wind, red rock canyons, crystals, turquoise, and volcanoes. In the 1980s, her minor Dream Series depicted a love story with female torsos and body parts surrounded by animals symbolizing the male.
Recent years
Yu’s 33-foot-long (10 m) works are permanently displayed on rotation in a circular room at QCC Art Gallery at the Queensborough Community College, alongside temporary exhibits such as Pablo Picasso, Andy Warhol, and QCC art students,[2] who have submitted essays discussing her technique and subject matter. In 2006, her four “Elements of Life” (Earth, Air, Water, Fire) paintings were followed by her “March of the Icebergs,” in response to today’s growing concerns about global warming.
Personal life
She, and real estate developer husband, James K. Yu, lived and worked in SoHo, New York from 1969 to 2007, and in 2008, opened a studio in Long Island City, Queens. The couple has two children, Daniel and Stephanie.[3]
Quotations on Yu
- “… intimate and sublime at once… the detail of nature while conveying its panoramic sweep…” --Donald Kuspit[4]
- “Yu finds a balance between the subtleties of Chinese painting and the forthright ambition and eloquence of Abstract Expressionism.” --Jonathan Goodman[5]
- “… a resilient flow of energy that is boundless and yet miraculously controlled…” --Robert C. Morgan[6]
- “… a new, thorough exploitation of the physical properties and possibilities of paint on canvas and paper.” --James Mann[7]
Selected exhibitions
- Musée d'Art et d'Histoire
- Grande Arche
- National Gallery in Prague
- Taipei Fine Arts Museum
- National Art Museum of China
- Lincoln Center
- New York Academy of Art
- Chelsea Art Museum
- San Jose Museum of Art
Notes
- ^ http://siris-libraries.si.edu/ipac20/ipac.jsp?uri=full=3100001~!624703!0
- ^ http://www.qcc.cuny.edu/ArtGallery/Calendar/Calendar.asp
- ^ http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/21/fashion/weddings/21yu.html
- ^ http://www.artnet.com/magazine/reviews/kuspit/kuspit2-18-04.asp
- ^ Goodman, Jonathan (January 1999). “Marlene Tseng Yu at Space Untitled”. Art in America.
- ^ Morgan, Robert C. (December 2002). “Forest Raging: Painting by Marlene Tseng Yu”. Berliner Kunst.
- ^ Mann, James (2004). "Beyond Post-Modernism: The Abstract Art of Marlene Tseng Yu". In Marlene Tseng Yu (Ed.), Forces of Nature III: Oversize Paintings. Las Vegas: Las Vegas Art Museum. OCLC 78680516.
External links
- Official site. (Java).
Categories:- 1937 births
- Abstract expressionist artists
- American painters
- American people of Chinese descent
- American people of Taiwanese descent
- Living people
- Modern painters
- Taiwanese emigrants to the United States
- University of Colorado alumni
- American women artists
- Women painters
- Artists from New York City
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