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LENORE CHINN CHRONOLOGY by Molly Robertson "My parents' decision to leave the safety and familiarity of Chinatown led to experiences which were almost unprecedented for that era, and certainly were rare for Asian Americans. This path, forged by my father in pursuit of his professional goals as an educator and mathematician, opened the door to a new way of life. My younger brother and I grew up with a family model, which offered simultaneously a traditional Chinese cultural framework of community and family, along with the opportunity to embrace non-traditional and non-Asian ideas. In short, my life's journey became a cross-pollination of other world views." "Unaware of prevailing attitudes (realtors were not inclined to offer bidding to non-whites outside their own racially-designated areas), I accepted the fact that there were only a handful of Japanese and a sprinkling of Chinese in my early visual landscape and there were no Hispanics or African Americans, and very few families of mixed heritage…" "The monochromatic palette, which initially obscured my view of the world, was broadened only by sporadic introductions to new friends outside my immediate family. Over the years, the Richmond District’s sea of white inhabitants met with an influx of new tongues, cultures, ethnicities, races, and religions. This triggered a life-long curiosity in me, together with a cultural challenge for my family, who was struggling to maintain its Chinese identity. It set the stage for a complex layering of cultural encounters and a personal odyssey which defied many of the labels, mores and social limitations imposed on the ‘cultural others’ of my post-war, baby-boom generation. These early explorations gave me the foundation for a more global perspective: I identified with others, prompting an insatiable appetite for understanding the rituals and traditions of people from very diverse backgrounds. Ultimately, this also became a part of my growth and development as a visual artist…" "…as a very young child I always had an interest in drawing and painting, and experimented with different media to make things for my own entertainment. I have fond memories of my father taking me to the public library, where I was fascinated with books on drawing and constructing functional toys. Despite conflicting family expectations about the appropriateness of this interest extending beyond my earlier years, I continued to pursue these artistic inclinations." (www.sla.purdue.edu/academic/vpa/ad/waaw/AsianAmerican/ArtistsCN.html) "Since entering the public school system, my art education was pretty much based on a Western European art tradition and methodology. Much of my work has been highly realistic from the beginning, and meticulously detailed drawings have led to the way I approach my painting." "In my junior college years, in the mid to late 1960s during the Vietnam war, there was a lot of student unrest and activity in response to it. This continued when I went to San Francisco State College (which was not a university at the time). During this period, the campus was a hotbed of all kinds of political activity -- it was the time of Kent State, and it was not uncommon to see the TAC Squad, Mounted Police, and other forces on campus. I still have photos of that era." "So this was the backdrop that shaped from hereon my political thinking in terms of humanitarian issues, civil rights, and social justice issues. My major was sociology, and, although I didn’t pursue this as a career, I think it led to a certain type of philosophical and sociological thinking that has influenced my work." "My work is based on ideas and ideologies that are, in my view, relevant to my personal life. I’ve taken a track away from commercialism, per se. I did spend time in advertising art and design and I did art production. Some of these early skills that I learned way back then, such as printmaking and photography, I still use. A lot of that has changed over the years, and my art work has changed with the new technologies. Now I do some digital work and incorporate scanning and things like that along with my painting. All of these things are in the mix in terms of how I approach my art and art making." First solo exhibition, Lucien Labaudt Art Gallery, San Francisco. First group exhibitions: San Francisco Art Commission’s Gallery and Richmond Arts Center. Chinn is awarded the Ligoa Duncan Award from the Musee de Duncan, Paris. Chinn is in three group exhibitions: San Francisco Arts Festival, Haywood Area Forum for the Arts, and Allied Artists of America (put on by the National Arts Club, New York, NY). Receives awards from Art in the Park, San Francisco, and Westwood Center for the Arts, Los Angeles. "… I came here with my first lover and we lived over on Caselli, off Douglass Street. I’ve talked to other people about the rarity of finding native San Franciscans these days (there are so many transplants); I didn’t really do anything except change zip codes! This of course was a big step because I became entrenched in community activities, and my art evolved along with that." "… I became acquainted with some of the folks that were setting up ironing boards and what have you on the corner of 18th and Castro. Some of them were political activists from the then Harvey Milk Club. I became acquainted with the activities and the issues that were happening at the time, and jumped in around 1980. This predated the AIDS epidemic as we know it, but in those early years I joined the Harvey Milk Club and became interested in some of the things that were going on there. Eventually at the beginning of the eighties I remember hearing speakers like Marcus Conant, and Paul Volberding. AIDS was an issue that crept into the community in the sense that we didn’t realize what was going on at the time. We started reading articles about a cancer of unknown origins, KS as we later came to euphemistically refer to it, and the other kinds of things for which nobody seemed to know what was happening, but we had some suspicions. Then we started seeing more articles in the national newspapers and the national magazines. Some of them included members or friends in the community. We remember Bobby Campbell, who became known as the poster child one year. And then it led to other issues of º ‘Okay’ we are dealing with some sort of a health crisis, but we don’t know exactly what the causes are. There were a lot of discussions among the different political groups at the time. Some of these groups were the Alice B. Toklas Club, Stonewall, and others that I remember from the early period." "… My signature paintings, with their super realistic, crisply rendered compositions convey a subtle message of visibility for the socially and politically disenfranchised peoples in my personal social landscape -- people of color, women, lesbians, and gay men. In my oversized acrylics on canvas I explore a genre that is largely invisible in the fine arts. Through character studies in contemporary themes I restore cultural difference to center stage, creating a presence which resonates in its luminosity, texture, color, and light. While enticing the viewer with a non-confrontational aesthetic, these narratives simultaneously challenge old world views and compel a rethinking of how we define society’s others." (www.sla.purdue.edu/academic/vpa/ad/waaw/AsianAmerican/ArtistsCN.html) Is a guest speaker at Galeria de La Raza, as a part of the San Francisco women’s theater group, Brava!. Group exhibition: Beyond Power: A Celebration, organized by Women’s Caucus for Art and Southern Exposure, Belmont and Redwood City, California. Also in group exhibition, Images: A Gallery, San Francisco. In two group exhibitions: Mom … Guess What! Art Search, Newspaper Sacramento, California and Artists Against AIDS -- Phase IV, San Francisco. Co-curates, with Dori Friend and Richard Bolingbroke (and also shows in) The Lesbian and Gay Fine Art Exhibit, City Hall Rotunda, San Francisco; and Artists Equity Exhibition at South of Market Cultural Center, (Northern California Chapter), San Francisco. Participates in first annual Open Studios of San Francisco, as well as Women’s Building Arts and Crafts Fair, Fort Mason, San Francisco. Is a panelist on "Forum: Talking about Lesbian and Gay Issues," KQED television, San Francisco. Two solo exhibitions: The Michael Himovitz Gallery, Sacramento, California, and Rasmussen Gallery, Pacific Union College, Angwin, California. Is in three group exhibitions: Visible for a Change, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts; Open Studios of San Francisco, and Pro-Arts Gallery, Oakland; co-sponsored by Guerrilla Girls West. Panelist at Outwrite Writers Conference, (on Artists and Media), San Francisco. Panelist at Annual Conference of the College Art Association, Chicago, Illinois. Appears on Suzie’s Cue, Pacifica Community Television, Incorporated. Is a guest speaker Sunday’s Child Salon, The Eye Gallery, San Francisco. Exhibits in three group exhibitions: Gallery Route One, Pt. Reyes Station, California; Levi Strauss and Co., San Francisco, and HIV Healing Arts Project, Project Open Hand, South of Market Cultural Center, San Francisco. Is a guest speaker, Queer in Your Ear: Hobnail Boots to Stilleto Heels: Lesbian Sensibilities, KPFA radio, Berkeley, California. Panelist Lesbian Visual Artists: Counting Your Art Market, The Eye Gallery, San Francisco. Receives Bronze Award for Contemporary Painting, Arts of California, Discovery 1993 Awards, Napa, California. Exhibits with Asian American Women Artists Association, South of Market Cultural Center, San Francisco. Co-curates with Steven Compton (and also shows in) Family Album, The Luggage Store Gallery, San Francisco. Co-juries with Adrienne Fuzee and Billy Lynn: Public/ Private: Lesbian Visual Artists, South of Market Cultural Center, San Francisco. Speaks at KNBR Community Forum Family Album, San Francisco. Exhibits at Esperanza Peace and Justice Center, San Antonio, Texas, and No More Scapegoats, Corte Madera, California. Is a panelist on Forum: Voice of the Voter, KQED. Exhibits in Family Matters: Traditional and Contemporary Depictions of Home Life (also acts as a docent), Bedford Gallery/ Regional Center for the Arts, Walnut Creek, California, The Wall of Restitution, Thomasina De Maio Gallery, Guerneville, California, and Families: Rebuilding, Reinventing, Recreating, Euphrat Museum of Art, De Anza College, Cupertino, California. Speaks at 3 x 2: An International Dialogue Between Asian American Women Artists, National Women’s Caucus for Art, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and Inside City Limits, TCI San Francisco, Cable TV Channel 35 and Bay TV, San Francisco. Appears on Women Artists of the American West, a web site for Purdue and Pennylvania State Universities.
Awarded Serpent Source Grant, San Francisco, California. Exhibits in Active Edge, Lesbians in the Visual Arts, Mission Cultural Center, San Francisco, California. Co-curates with Flo Oy Wong, Moira Roth, and Kim Anno: They Hold up Half the Sky æ Bernice Bing: A Memorial Tribute and Retrospective, for the Queer Cultural Center at the South of Market Cultural Center, San Francisco, California. Prepares for her retrospective in Spring/Summer 2001, South of Market Cultural Center, San Francisco. "Some time ago in the last couple of years, when a core group of us were working on putting the Bernice Bing retrospective together, I had gotten to chatting with Carlos Loarca, the gallery director down at SOMARTS. We had discussed putting a show together. He asked me, would I ever consider having a show there if they had an opening? I said, ‘That sounds like a great idea.’ Meanwhile I kind of parked it. I had talked to other people about the idea, and we had decided that it really was time to create some kind of mini-retrospective of my work, spanning over two decades. So these were little ideas, little seeds in the back of my mind. And then one day I thought, I’ll just go ahead and call Carlos and see if we could start to plan, maybe a year or so in advance -- perhaps in the year 2001 or so. He agreed, so we tentatively penciled in a fall show." "… I painted some [friends] before the onset of the AIDS epidemic, so there will actually be a number of paintings in the show depicting either friends or people within my network, as well as people who commissioned me to do work, who are no longer here. In calling my collectors, one of them was a favorite piece of mine depicting Mike Housh and Rick Pacurar." "… I anticipate that I will have approximately 20 paintings with this focus in the SOMARTS exhibition, whose date was changed over the past several months. As I talked it over with various friends within my art network, including friends and board members from QCC and the Asian Pacific Islander Cultural Center, as well as SOMARTS, we decided that to capture a wider audience. We would nest this exhibition within the United States of Asian America Festival being presented by the Asian Pacific Islander Cultural Center, which goes on in May. So I switched the opening month of this exhibit and, with that it mind, had to jam on finishing this Bing painting in time because I wanted to have the opportunity for premiering it in my exhibition." "Meanwhile, after more discussions, we had the idea of starting this exhibition under the Asian Festival, and letting it bleed into the beginning of the Queer Cultural Festival as well. This way we can capture a wider audience of lesbians, gays, bis, transgenders, and other communities, along with the Asian community during that time frame." |