Wednesday, May 13, 2026 - 12:00 PM
to Saturday, July 18, 2026 - 5:00 PM
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Wrightwood 659 (659 W. Wrightwood Avenue) has opened Martin Wong: Chinatown USA, an exhibition focusing on an underexplored through-line in the practice of visionary Chinese American artist Martin Wong (1946-1999): his fascination with Asia through Chinatowns as personal, mythical cityscapes. Wong explored these spaces—filled with Asian art and architecture as adopted in the United States amid the explosion of street culture in San Francisco and New York in the late 20th century—as amalgams of memory, identity, and queer and pop-culture narratives.
The first U.S. museum exhibition devoted to Wong since 2017, Martin Wong: Chinatown USA is curated by Yasufumi Nakamori, PhD, with Ashley Janke, Assistant Curator, Wrightwood 659. The exhibition is presented by Halsted A&A Foundation.
The exhibition and its accompanying, fully illustrated catalogue take their title from the artist’s 1993 exhibition at the downtown Manhattan gallery P·P·O·W, which still represents the artist’s estate today. Only six years later, Wong died of an AIDS-related illness at the age of 53. Since then, his reputation has continued to grow as a queer painter and poet who traversed identities and sampled a dizzying array of cultural references. Critical attention, however, has largely focused on his paintings of the Lower East Side, and the artists, poets, and immigrants in this neighborhood. Far less recognized are the Chinatown- and Asia-inspired paintings, drawings, and sculptures he created throughout his career. Martin Wong: Chinatown USA positions these works as central to his hybrid practice.
Wrightwood 659’s presentation documents Wong’s lifelong fascination with the streets, storefronts, nightlife, myths, Asian art, and celebrations of Chinatowns—even amid his better-known collaborations and creative exchanges with Nuyorican poets and graffiti artists on the Lower East Side.
Chinatown USA features more than 100 paintings, drawings, ceramic works, and photo collages, complemented by videos and artifacts, including pre-modern Asian objects collected by Wong. Several works reflect his interest in calligraphy, graffiti, and American Sign Language (ASL). A selection of works from his graffiti collection, on loan from the Museum of the City of New York, is also on view.
Mariah Keller, Executive Director of Wrightwood 659, says “At Wrightwood 659, we are committed to presenting art that confronts urgent social questions and foregrounds LGBTQ+ and Asian voices. Martin Wong’s work does both with extraordinary imagination and humanity. His paintings speak across communities and across time, making this exhibition deeply resonant for our moment.”
“Martin occupied a complex position in regard to his identity, balancing intense personal attachment to his Chinese heritage with a grasp of the issues of Orientalism and the related marginalization of queer, Asian, Latino, and Black people,” says Dr. Nakamori. “It’s true he did not grow up speaking Chinese, nor did he ever visit China. He claimed his view of Chinatown was like that of an outsider. Our scholarship suggests complexities and nuances of his own identity and relationship with Asia through Chinatown.”
Event Links
Tickets: https://go.evvnt.com/3635197-0
Website: https://go.evvnt.com/3635197-2
