Thursday, August 21, 2025
No Result
View All Result
Crypeto News
Smarter_way_USA
  • Home
  • Bitcoin
  • Crypto Updates
    • General
    • Blockchain
    • Ethereum
    • Altcoin
    • Mining
    • Crypto Exchanges
  • NFT
  • DeFi
  • Web3
  • Metaverse
  • Analysis
  • Regulations
  • Scam Alert
  • Videos
CRYPTO MARKETCAP
  • Home
  • Bitcoin
  • Crypto Updates
    • General
    • Blockchain
    • Ethereum
    • Altcoin
    • Mining
    • Crypto Exchanges
  • NFT
  • DeFi
  • Web3
  • Metaverse
  • Analysis
  • Regulations
  • Scam Alert
  • Videos
CRYPTO MARKETCAP
Crypeto News
No Result
View All Result

The rediscovery of Abstract Expressionist Bernice Bing

by crypetonews
November 22, 2022
in NFT
Reading Time: 7 mins read
0 0
A A
0
Home NFT
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


Bernice Bing, a Chinese American artist who was part of the lively Bay Area art scene of the late 1950s and 60s but never found widespread recognition, is finally getting her due in a show at the Asian Art Museum in San Francisco. Into View: Bernice Bing (until 26 June 2023) will likely be as important a revelation for most visitors as it was when curator Abby Chen first came across the artist’s work about a decade ago. She was working at the city’s Chinese Culture Center at the time and had heard of Bing but became especially intrigued after seeing Madeleine Lim’s documentary, The Worlds of Bernice Bing (2013).

Recently, the Bing estate offered some works to the museum and Chen jumped at the chance to acquire 24 of them, which were partly gifted and partly purchased. The exhibition, with its 20 paintings, traces an interrupted but persistent attempt to follow art’s calling—from the bold Abstract Expressionist works of her youth to her explorations of the female form, landscapes in ink on paper and her eventual return to pure abstraction.

Bernice Bing, A Lady and a Road Map, 1962. Asian Art Museum of San Francisco, museum purchase © Estate of the Artist. Photograph © Asian Art Museum of San Francisco.

Born in San Francisco in 1936, Bing became orphaned at age five, growing up in an orphanage and a series of foster homes. In 1955 she won a scholarship to the California College of Arts and Crafts (now California College of the Arts), where she studied with Richard Diebenkorn and Saburo Hasegawa. Hasegawa introduced her to Asian art and Zen philosophy, subjects Bing would incorporate into both her art and spiritual practice.

“At that time I knew almost nothing about Eastern art or thought,” she wrote in an artist statement in 1990. “I was totally naïve about my own cultural heritage. I was living in and reacting to parallel worlds—one, the rational, conscious world of the West; the other, the intuitive, unconscious world of the East. This duality caused me to explore the differences and samenesses in art forms.” Two years later she transferred to the San Francisco Art Institute, where she studied with Elmer Bischoff and Frank Lobdell, and earned her MFA in 1961.

Bernice Bing, Lotus Circle/Lotus Goddess, 1986-88. Asian Art Museum of San Francisco, gift of the Estate of Bernice Bing. © Estate of the Artist. Photograph © Asian Art Museum of San Francisco.

That year she also had a North Beach studio, where she posed for a photo taken at ground level. The artist is stretched out, head propped up on her right arm and looking confidently into the camera. Her large canvases fill the background, including her abstracted version of Velázquez’s Las Meninas (1656). She was part of the Beat art scene, mingling with Joan Brown, Jay DeFeo and Carlos Villa. At the end of the year she had her first solo show, at the avant-garde Batman Gallery, but she was barely eking by financially, working odd jobs to support herself.

In 1962, Bing left the city and took a job as caretaker at a vineyard in the Mayacamas, a mountain range in northwestern California. It was the first time she had lived in a rural environment. “I was profoundly touched by this new world—nature and the changes of the seasons that I had suddenly discovered. So I did a series of landscapes which were very organic,” she said in a 1991 interview. One of the works she did while there is on display, Mayacamas IV (1963), an oil painting of a dark mound of a mountain on the right and undulating swatches of land all around its base. Although Bing sometimes sought the quiet of rural areas, she was also engaged with the times. “I had become very interested in Jung’s work,” she said in the 1991 interview. “I was impressed with his autobiography, Dreams, Memories and Reflections, and with his ideas about the collective unconscious, and his use of symbols. It was a time of change—the 1960s, the flower child movement.”

Bernice Bing, Untitled, 1959-63. Asian Art Museum, museum purchase Photograph © Asian Art Museum of San Francisco

When she eventually returned to San Francisco, she became involved in community arts groups, and starting in 1980 she ran the South of Market Cultural Center (SOMArts) for several years. At the end of 1984 she had a chance to visit Korea, Japan and China on a Fulbright scholarship. She studied Chinese calligraphy at the Zhejiang Art Academy in Hangzhou, an experience which inspired further fusion of Eastern and Western elements in her abstract paintings.

After that trip she knew she wanted to concentrate on her own art again, and moved to the rural town of Philo, California. Bing worked until her final years. She died in 1998 at age 62, following a battle with lupus and hemochromatosis. Her bold triptych Epilogue (1990-95), six feet tall and 24ft wide—is from that late period. It is comprised of a series of vertical sections, with bundles of expressive, rather light-hearted painting throughout, then a rather mysterious patch of blue-black that spans the second and third panels. “She named it Epilogue because she was using this as a way to say goodbye,” Chen says. “It was kind of a summary of where she was at that time.”

Bernice Bing, Epilogue, 1990-95. Asian Art Museum of San Francisco, museum purchase © Estate of the Artist. Photograph © Asian Art Museum of San Francisco

The curator thinks Bing was excluded from post-war art history for several reasons, including being Chinese American and based on the West Coast. It may also be because Bing, like Carlos Villa—another Bay Area artist the museum recently featured—and Ruth Asawa, maintained art practices that were “intertwined with community work”, Chen says. The exhibition is part of the museum’s efforts to feature under-recognised Asian artists and proudly identifies Bing as Chinese American, a woman and a lesbian—though she was quite closeted in her time, and only those close to her knew her sexual identity.

Bing’s legacy would not be known today had it not been for a handful of determined friends who kept it alive and helped put her work in museums. Lenore Chinn is one; she started making a list of Bing’s works over the decades, partly from the artist’s inventory of slides. The late Mills College art history professor Moira Roth included Bing in her courses, and the Asian American Women Artists Association, a group Bing helped found, co-produced the documentary The Worlds of Bernice Bing.

To get to this juncture, says Chinn, “It has taken 24 years of unrelenting commitment among those of us who knew Bernice Bing and felt she deserved to be recognised for her contributions.”

Into View: Bernice Bing, until 26 June 2023, Asian Art Museum, San Francisco



Source link

Tags: abstractBerniceBingExpressionistrediscovery
Previous Post

Binance Coin Loses $270 Support As Bears Eye $200; Will Bears Push Harder?

Next Post

Core Banking Software Company Finxact Forges Strategic Partnership with KPMG

Related Posts

Tanya Bonakdar Gallery will close Los Angeles location – The Art Newspaper
NFT

Tanya Bonakdar Gallery will close Los Angeles location – The Art Newspaper

August 20, 2025
OpenAI Researcher: Students Should Still Learn to Code
NFT

OpenAI Researcher: Students Should Still Learn to Code

August 20, 2025
Food52 Exec Stole at Least 0K, Used Company Credit Card
NFT

Food52 Exec Stole at Least $270K, Used Company Credit Card

August 20, 2025
A brush with… Teresita Fernández—podcast – The Art Newspaper
NFT

A brush with… Teresita Fernández—podcast – The Art Newspaper

August 20, 2025
How I Built a Business That Thrives Through Constant Disruption — and How You Can Too
NFT

How I Built a Business That Thrives Through Constant Disruption — and How You Can Too

August 19, 2025
San Francisco’s de Young Museum opens revamped Native American art galleries – The Art Newspaper
NFT

San Francisco’s de Young Museum opens revamped Native American art galleries – The Art Newspaper

August 19, 2025
Next Post
Core Banking Software Company Finxact Forges Strategic Partnership with KPMG

Core Banking Software Company Finxact Forges Strategic Partnership with KPMG

RGB Magic Client Contracts On Bitcoin – Bitcoin Magazine

RGB Magic Client Contracts On Bitcoin - Bitcoin Magazine

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

RECOMMENDED

XRP Added to €2B Futures Market at Dutch Firm One Trading
Crypto Updates

XRP Added to €2B Futures Market at Dutch Firm One Trading

by crypetonews
August 18, 2025
0

Executive Interview with Kathy Lian from BKTraders | iFX EXPO International 2025 Executive Interview with Kathy Lian from BKTraders |...

Bhutan offloads  million in Bitcoin amid price dip

Bhutan offloads $92 million in Bitcoin amid price dip

August 18, 2025
GENIUS Act Clash Heats Up Between Banks and Crypto Groups

GENIUS Act Clash Heats Up Between Banks and Crypto Groups

August 21, 2025
Hong Kong Monetary Authority Reports Decline in Credit Card Receivables for Q2 2025

Hong Kong Monetary Authority Reports Decline in Credit Card Receivables for Q2 2025

August 15, 2025
London’s Dulwich Picture Gallery prepares to reveal £5m redevelopment – The Art Newspaper

London’s Dulwich Picture Gallery prepares to reveal £5m redevelopment – The Art Newspaper

August 18, 2025
George Morrison exhibition foregrounds Abstract Expressionism’s debt to Native art – The Art Newspaper

George Morrison exhibition foregrounds Abstract Expressionism’s debt to Native art – The Art Newspaper

August 15, 2025

Please enter CoinGecko Free Api Key to get this plugin works.
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Top 10 NFTs to Watch in 2025 for High-Return Investments

Top 10 NFTs to Watch in 2025 for High-Return Investments

November 22, 2024
Enforceable Human-Readable Transactions: Can They Prevent Bybit-Style Hacks?

Enforceable Human-Readable Transactions: Can They Prevent Bybit-Style Hacks?

February 27, 2025
Top Crypto Portfolio Rebalancing Tools (Automated & Manual)

Top Crypto Portfolio Rebalancing Tools (Automated & Manual)

April 13, 2025
Best Cryptocurrency Portfolio Tracker Apps to Use in 2025

Best Cryptocurrency Portfolio Tracker Apps to Use in 2025

April 24, 2025
Uniswap v4 Teases Major Updates for 2025

Uniswap v4 Teases Major Updates for 2025

January 2, 2025
FTT jumps 7% as Backpack launches platform to help FTX victims liquidate claims

FTT jumps 7% as Backpack launches platform to help FTX victims liquidate claims

July 18, 2025
Flash USDT | How It Became the Biggest Crypto Scam Worldwide

Flash USDT | How It Became the Biggest Crypto Scam Worldwide

31
Andrew Tate is Desperate Now

Andrew Tate is Desperate Now

40
XRP's Current Price Is FAKE | If You Hold XRP You Must Know This

XRP's Current Price Is FAKE | If You Hold XRP You Must Know This

50
Xrp news today | xrp price prediction #shorts #crypto #xrp

Xrp news today | xrp price prediction #shorts #crypto #xrp

32
BITCOIN BULL MARKET OVER? I AM TROUBLED #bitcoin #bitcoinnews #bitcoinprice #xrp #xrpnews #btc

BITCOIN BULL MARKET OVER? I AM TROUBLED #bitcoin #bitcoinnews #bitcoinprice #xrp #xrpnews #btc

39
“We’ll See  Million Per Bitcoin By 2030,” Says Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong

“We’ll See $1 Million Per Bitcoin By 2030,” Says Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong

August 21, 2025
Kraken Acquires Israeli Vibe Coding Startup Capitalise.ai to Enhance No-Code Trading Automation on Kraken Pro

Kraken Acquires Israeli Vibe Coding Startup Capitalise.ai to Enhance No-Code Trading Automation on Kraken Pro

August 21, 2025
Altman Admits GPT-5 Rollout Failed, Pins Hopes on GPT-6

Altman Admits GPT-5 Rollout Failed, Pins Hopes on GPT-6

August 21, 2025
GENIUS Act Clash Heats Up Between Banks and Crypto Groups

GENIUS Act Clash Heats Up Between Banks and Crypto Groups

August 21, 2025
Eric Trump Predicts M Bitcoin: Market Spotlight on $HYPER

Eric Trump Predicts $1M Bitcoin: Market Spotlight on $HYPER

August 21, 2025
Bitcoin Braces For Pain As  Trillion Liquidity Engine Shuts Off

Bitcoin Braces For Pain As $2 Trillion Liquidity Engine Shuts Off

August 21, 2025
Crypeto News

Find the latest Bitcoin, Ethereum, blockchain, crypto, Business, Fintech News, interviews, and price analysis at Crypeto News.

CATEGORIES

  • Altcoin
  • Analysis
  • Bitcoin
  • Blockchain
  • Crypto Exchanges
  • Crypto Updates
  • DeFi
  • Ethereum
  • Metaverse
  • Mining
  • NFT
  • Regulations
  • Scam Alert
  • Uncategorized
  • Videos
  • Web3

LATEST UPDATES

  • “We’ll See $1 Million Per Bitcoin By 2030,” Says Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong
  • Kraken Acquires Israeli Vibe Coding Startup Capitalise.ai to Enhance No-Code Trading Automation on Kraken Pro
  • Altman Admits GPT-5 Rollout Failed, Pins Hopes on GPT-6
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • DMCA
  • Cookie Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Contact us

Copyright © 2022 Crypeto News.
Crypeto News is not responsible for the content of external sites.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Bitcoin
  • Crypto Updates
    • General
    • Blockchain
    • Ethereum
    • Altcoin
    • Mining
    • Crypto Exchanges
  • NFT
  • DeFi
  • Web3
  • Metaverse
  • Analysis
  • Regulations
  • Scam Alert
  • Videos

Copyright © 2022 Crypeto News.
Crypeto News is not responsible for the content of external sites.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In