Background
Wong was born in Portland, Oregon and raised in the Chinatown district of San Francisco.
Wong was born in Portland, Oregon and raised in the Chinatown district of San Francisco.
He studied ceramics at Humboldt State University, graduating in 1968.
Early years
Through college and for another 10 years he was active in the San Francisco Bay Area art scene, including stints as a set designer for the performance art groups The Cockettes and Angels of Light. He was openly gay. In 1978 he moved to Manhattan, eventually settling in the Lower East Side, where his attention turned exclusively to painting. According to Wong, his move to New York was precipitated by a friendly challenge:
Wong"s mature work ranged from gritty, heartfelt renderings of the decaying Lower East Side, to playful, almost kitschy depictions of New York"s and San Francisco"s Chinatowns, to "traffic signs for the hearing impaired".
He is perhaps best known for his collaborations with Nuyorican poet Miguel Piñero, paintings that often combined Piñero"s poetry or prose with Wong"s painstaking cityscapes and stylized fingerspelling.
Wong"s Loisaida pieces and collaborations with Piñero form part of the Nuyorican arts movement. Wong was a collector and connoisseur of everything from graffiti to Asian antiquities.
Foreign a time in the 1980s he made ends meet by buying underpriced antiquities at Christie"s and selling them at Sotheby"s for a fairer price. His graffiti collection grew to be perhaps the largest in the world.
In 1994 he donated it to the Museum of the City of New New York
Once nearly overlooked by the art establishment, Wong was acknowledged in his New York Times obituary as an artist "whose meticulous visionary realism is among the lasting legacies of New York"s East Village art scene of the 1980s". Critical esteem has sustained since his death, and Wong"s works can be found in collections worldwide, including the collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the de Young Museum and the cities of New York and San Francisco. The Martin Wong Papers reside at the Fales Library, New York University, and include among other things sketchbooks, correspondence, biographical documents, videocassette recordings, photos, graffiti-related materials, and parts of Wong"s personal library.
The catalog of a joint exhibition of Wong"s work at the New Museum of Contemporary Art and the Illinois State University Galleries was published by Rizzoli in 1998 in Sweet Oblivion: The Urban Landscape of Martin Wong.
Two of Martin Wong"s paintings are in the collection of the Whitney Museum in New York City. One of his paintings is in the collection of the state of California and displayed permanently at the California State Building in San Francisco.
The Society of Contemporary Art at the Art Institute of Chicago acquired the painting "Sweet Oblivion" in May 2012. Personal life
Wong died in San Francisco from an Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome related illness in 1999.