About this Event
Albert Chong is a contemporary artist dealing with personal mysticism, spirituality, race and identity, and numerous other topics through his work. His main bodies of photographic work have been in the genres of still life in black and white and color that represent and reanimate Chong’s family history. Through his work we learn about Aunt Winnie, Justice, Miss Peggy, and gain an insight into one family’s story from Jamaica’s past. These works use analog and digital layering to create the sometimes dense but usually simple arrangements that infer, relate, connect and signify the complex nature of the struggles of the displaced peoples of the Asian and African diaspora. Chong’s other works in the photographic medium include his Throne for the Ancestors Series and his portraits of artist friends and of Jamaicans in Various parts of Jamaica.
Albert Chong was born in Kingston, Jamaica, W. I. in 1958. He is the last of eight children of merchant Chinese and Afro Jamaica parents. He lived in Brooklyn and attended the School of Visual Arts in New York City where he received a BFA with Honors in 1981.
Now, William will be joining us for a conversation about his work with Brandywine and the inspiration that drives him to create his paintings and print. Join us on March 10 at 6pm to gain insight into his process and ask questions from the artist himself. We hope to see you there!
Photo courtesy of East Side Art Institute
Event Venue & Nearby Stays
730 S Broad St, 730 South Broad Street, Philadelphia, United States
USD 0.00









