2017
Evelyn Taocheng Wang Dutch, born China, 1981
Reflecting her experience as an Asian transgender woman living in the Netherlands, Evelyn Taocheng Wang’s subject matter includes objects, places, and personae (both fictional and historical) that represent transformation and displacement. Wang uses a variety of styles and media to create works that are confessional and autobiographical yet also address the ways in which sexual identity, ethnicity, labor, and class establish hierarchies within society.
Save my baby first! is part of an installation that communicates her anxiety about the cultural, ethnic, and gender roles people assume or are assigned. Wang frequently incorporates female artists’ voices in her work; here she refers to Virginia Woolf’s novel To the Lighthouse (1927), drawing parallels to the protagonist, Lily Briscoe, who questions her identity in relation to the gender norms of her time. The man and woman represented are intentionally ambiguous; they could refer to characters from Woolf’s novel, the artist herself, or people from her daily life. At the lower right Wang inserted a text, an exchange between the two figures in the painting: “‘Save my baby first!’” the woman exclaims, straining to protect the infant from the yellow waves that engulf her. The chained man in the sky responds, “‘What?!? She is a real woman now?! She just gave birth?! No! No! This is impossible! She is not a woman! She is a false one!’” Blending absurdist dialogue and personal narrative, the text blurs the fine line between fact and fiction typical of Wang’s practice, as does her gesture of installing the work on paper next to her own dress by French designer agnès b.
Ink and watercolor on rice paper; agnès b. dress