| Eye
of the Rice
Baby Jack Rice Story
made in usa: Angel Island
Shhh
Kindred Spirit
I Don't Know Where the
Chinese Cook Lived
Kente Rice Women: Talking
Our Connection
Experimental Rice Sacks
Gee Ling Oy
Paper Sister: Instructed
to tell the Truth
Rice for my Ancestors
Rice Sacks for my Siblings
Through Women's Eyes:
From Beijing to Huairou |
The various bodies of work - Eye of the Rice:
Yu Mai Gee Fon, Baby Jack Rice Story, I Don't Know
Where the Chinese Cook Lived, Kente Rice Women: Talking Our
Connection, made in usa: Angel Island Shhh, Kindred Spirit
and others - which make up the Asian Rice Sack Series,
refer to individual and collective narratives about the Chinese
diaspora in America.
Rice was part of daily
fare when Flo Oy Wong was a child, working in the family restaurant
on Webster Street. But it was also part of family history
and family lore-it was, after all, sacks of rice that supported
the family while her father was recovering from having been
shot by a relative. Then years later at age forty, Wong saw
the possibilities of rice sacks for art making. Now they are
in many ways a primary medium for her, just as others might
turn to paint or stone as a medium.
Flo Oy Wong has created
an amazing body of work about family, history, culture, memory,
commemoration and celebration in the medium of rice sacks,
a medium that she has made her own so successfully.
Moira Roth
Trefethen Professor of Art History
Mills College
|