Tyrus Wong

Tyrus Wong

Wong was born Wong Gen Yeo on October 25, 1910 in Taishan, Guangdong, China.In 1920, when he was nine years old, Wong and his father emigrated to the United States, and never again came into contact with his mother and sister.Wong was initially held at the Angel Island Immigration Station, due to the Chinese Exclusion Act. There he was separated from his father while he waited to be questioned about his identity.Because most Chinese immigration was prohibited under the Chinese Exclusion Act, Wong and his father had to immigrate illegally under assumed identities as "paper sons" of Chinese American sponsors.After his release from Angel Island, he and his father initially relocated to Sacramento. His father later moved the family to Los Angeles.
While attending Benjamin Franklin Junior High in Pasadena, Wong's teachers noticed his artistic ability and he received a summer scholarship at the Otis Art Institute. Wong decided to leave junior high for a full-time scholarship at Otis. Wong's father survived on a more modest income, and Wong worked as a janitor at Otis. He walked for miles to attend classes. He graduated from Otis in the 1930s and began working in Hollywood.Wong's career ranged from working as a Hallmark greeting card designer, to being a Warner Bros. film production illustrator (1942–1968), including drawing set designs and storyboards for several movies, and an inspirational sketch artist (1938–1941) for Disney. It was his lush pastels that served as inspiration for Bambi (1942) where he was the lead artist of the project.
Wong left Disney studios shortly after finishing Bambi as a consequence of the Disney animators' strike. His contribution to Bambi was largely unknown for several decades.

Later, he designed popular greeting cards for Hallmark Cards.After retiring in 1968, Wong turned his skills to making colorful kites (usually animals such as pandas, goldfish, or centipedes). He spent his Saturdays flying his creations on the beach just north of the Santa Monica Pier.
Some of his well-known paintings include Self Portrait (late 1920s), Fire (1939), Reclining Nude (1940s), East (1984) and West (1984). He told an interviewer that he was a "lucky artist".Wong was featured in Mark Wexler's 2009 documentary How to Live Forever, where he discussed his daily lifestyle and his view on mortality, and in Pamela Tom's 2015 documentary Tyrus.The first solo exhibition of Wong's artwork, “Mid-Century Mandarin: The Clay Canvasses of Tyrus Wong,” curated by Bill Stern, was organized by the Museum of California Design. It focused on his paintings on dinnerware for Winfield China of Pasadena, California, in the 1940s and 50s, and was presented at CAFAM in Los Angeles, July 14 through October 31, 2004.
The Tyrus Wong: A Retrospective exhibit at the Chinese American Museum in Los Angeles, California showcased his work in October–December 2004. According to the museum:
This exhibit showcased the works of Tyrus Wong, who at the age of 93, is one of the earliest and most influential Chinese American artists in the United States. In his long, pioneering career as a local artist, Wong is a seasoned painter, muralist, ceramicist, lithographer, designer, and kite maker. The exhibit also featured Wong’s imaginative kites, which he has been building and flying for the past 30 years. Drawn from public and private collections, several of the pieces chosen for this exhibition have not been shown publicly since the 1930s.
In 2007, Wong was one of three illustrators featured in The Art of the Motion Picture Illustrator: William B. Major, Harold Michelson and Tyrus Wong, an exhibit in the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences's Grand Lobby Gallery in Beverly Hills.
Wong's work was featured in "Now Dig This!: Art and Black Los Angeles 1960-1980" an exhibition at the Hammer Museum, October 2011-January 2012.
His work was also included in the Round the Clock: Chinese American Artists Working in Los Angeles exhibit at the East Los Angeles College Vincent Price Art Museum, January–May 2012.
From August 2013 through February 2014, Wong's work was exhibited at The Walt Disney Family Museum in San Francisco, California in a career retrospective entitled: Water to Paper, Paint to Sky: The Art Of Tyrus Wong.A hardcover book was published by the Walt Disney Family Foundation Press in conjunction with the exhibit.
In 2015, Wong was featured in an eight-decade career retrospective, Water to Paper, Paint to Sky: The Art of Tyrus Wong, at the Museum of Chinese in America in Manhattan, New York City.

Paintings
Deer on Cliff (1960s)
The Cove, 1960s
Ceramics
Winfield Pottery - Tyrus Wong Iris plate.
Winfield Pottery - Tyrus Wong California Pink HP flower.
Filmography
Bambi (1942) - Animation Department. Animation backgrounds.
Around the World in Eighty Days (1956) - 1. Art Department. Assistant Art Director. 2. Miscellaneous Crew. Technical advisor.
How to Live Forever (2009) - Documentary about secrets of long life. Himself.
When the World Breaks (2010) - Documentary. Himself.
Angel Island Profiles: Tyrus Wong (2011) - Documentary about himself at age 100.
Tyrus (2015) - Documentary about himself