Matthew Wong achieved resounding critical acclaim during his short career, which spanned just six years, between 2013, when he began painting and drawing in earnest, and his death in 2019. In that time, he became known for vibrant, unpeopled landscape paintings in a wide range of styles and mediums, including oil, ink, watercolor, and gouache. In their universality, Wong’s landscapes reflect his own transnationality, having spent most of his life between Canada and Hong Kong.
The Dallas Museum of Art, the only museum that collected Wong's work during his lifetime, presents the first museum retrospective and U.S. museum exhibition devoted to the self-taught artist. Featuring approximately 50 paintings, the exhibition offers the first formal account of how Wong adeptly synthesized many inspirations—from the Fauvists to 17th-century Qing period ink painters, and contemporaries he admired—to create a visual language uniquely his own.
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Images: See You On the Other Side, 2019. Matthew Wong. Oil on canvas. Matthew Wong Foundation. © 2022 Matthew Wong Foundation / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York; The Long Way Home, 2015. Matthew Wong. Oil on canvas. Art Gallery of Ontario, © 2022 Matthew Wong Foundation / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York. Photo © Art Gallery of Ontario; The West, 2017. Matthew Wong. Oil on canvas. Dallas Museum of Art, Dallas Art Fair Foundation Acquisition Fund, 2017.28. © 2022 Matthew Wong Foundation / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York; Banishment from the Garden, 2015. Matthew Wong. Oil on canvas (left panel), oil on panel (right panel). Matthew Wong Foundation. © 2022 Matthew Wong Foundation / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York; The Performance, 2017. Matthew Wong. Ink on rice paper. Matthew Wong Foundation. © 2022 Matthew Wong Foundation / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.