Pearl C. Hsiung is a Taiwan-born American multi-media artist based in Los Angeles.
Biography
Pearl C. Hsiung was born in
Taichung,
Taiwan and raised and educated in California.[1] However, she and her brother, artist Michael C. Hsiung, spent time in Taiwan during several summer breaks from school.[2] Hsiung received her a BA in art from University of California of Los Angeles in 1997, and she earned her MFA from Goldsmiths College, London, in 2004.[3]
After graduating college, she began a career in commercial fashion design, but quickly found herself unfulfilled.[3] Hsiung then decided to pursue an MFA in art at Goldsmiths College in London.[4] She primarily works in painting, installation and video. Hsiung's earlier works reflect her Taiwanese roots and Los Angeles upbringing in its use of bright colors, hard-edged application techniques, and graphics informed by the quotidian and popular aesthetics of both cultures.[1] The subject matter usually focuses on nature and how humans relate and interact with and within it. Through her artwork Hsiung looks to understand how as humans we see and apply biological, social and cultural patterns in natural environments.[5]
Hsiung's painting style can be described as contemporary surrealism with a mixture of sci-fi and other components.[3] Currently, she is a working artist and arts educator based in Los Angeles, California.[6] In 2022, her tile artwork High Prismatic, was installed at the Grand Ave Arts/Bunker Hill subway station of the
Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority.[7]
Style and artwork
Hsiung works in a variety of media including paper, video, and paint.[8] Hsiung uses a style where she attempts to imitate computer graphics by hand while using mural-like bright colors.[9] Hsiung's bold landscapes are influenced by her summers in Taiwan as well as Southern California and Los Angeles street
murals and advertisements.[2] She creates psychedelic vistas in many of her works that she figuratively relates to consciousness.[10] Hsiung also uses humor in her art work to critique culture identity and to challenge art making and common notions.[2]
Overfiend (2003)
This painting is oil-based enamel on canvas. This abstract landscape features an eyeball as a giant sunset overlooking a beach where an egg is laying in the sun. The background is dark blue with palm trees in silhouette. With this painting, Hsiung presents her
anthropomorphic style which is present in many of her paintings.[11]
Power Chode Homina (2004)
In this painting, oil on canvas, we see her multicultural influence in the use of color and digital painting.[1] The graphics she depicts are done in a form that makes them appear videogame like.[1] This painting has alien like figures depicted on a space like landscape. We see nothing surrounding the figures other than themselves and smoke. The vibrant use of color creates a digital imitation look that reflects the influence of graffiti and mural painting commonly seen in the streets of L.A.[12] Hsiung in this painting and like in others has a humorous approach and creates a blatant joke about the phallus.[13]
Volcanic Ash (2010)
In this video work, Hsiung uses her trademark surrealist style and includes music performance and composing.[6] This six minute long piece is a music video which she uses the lyrics to describe a geological reality.[6] Her work is more than just a sci-fi and psychedelic fantasy, she explores natural cycles of destruction and rebirth.[14]
Yellowstoner (2014)
This video work by Hsiung brings her painting style to life. This piece takes place in
Yellowstone National Park, it is a thirty-minute video that took Hsiung almost 4 years to complete.[15] In this video we see a character, no gender specified, exploring this landscape through waterfalls and the
Geothermal areas of Yellowstone.[16] The character is shown doing cartwheels through the fields and other simple acts that describes the characters enjoyment of the landscape.[15] The way Yellowstone is captured by Hsiung depicts it as an other worldly realm by showing frames of the bubbling mud puddles and exploding geysers as well as the rainbows.[15] This video work by Hsiung is meant to portray the rhythm of nature and human interaction.[15]
Solo exhibitions
Pearl C. Hsiung's first solo exhibition was back in 2004 while she lived in Britain. In her debut at MW Projects in London, Hsiung holds Overfiend where she shared a couple paintings and transformed a room to fit her artistic aesthetic that would fit her other-worldly art.[12]
2019 –Fault Zone, Visitor Welcome Center, Los Angeles, CA
2018 –Two Faces, One Die, College of the Canyons Art Gallery, Valencia, CA
2017 –Full Gorge, Visitor Welcome Center, Los Angeles, CA[8]
2015 –Whiskeytown, O.N.O, Los Angeles, CA
2014 –Yellowstoner, Human Resources, Los Angeles, CA
2011 –Gusher: Pearl C Hsiung, Selected Works 2003 - 2011, Vincent Price Art Museum, East Los Angeles College, Monterey Park, CA[17]
2010 –Never Ends, Steve Turner Contemporary, Los Angeles, CA[18]
2007 –Eroto Erupto Infinito, Steve Turner Contemporary, Los Angeles, CA
2006 –To the Big Life, Max Wigram Gallery, London, UK
2004 –Pearl C. Hsiung, Upriver Gallery, Kunming, China