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New Women
Curated by Eric Huang
The CAMOC Archive Series proudly presents New Women, a special month-long program to celebrate International Women’s Day.
Since 2017, we have conducted a series of interviews with 18 women from Chicago’s Chinatown, documenting their oral histories and personal narratives. The collection features the voices of Anita Lau, Annie Lowe, Bernie Wong, Celia Cheung, Christine Woo, Elaine Louie, Esther Wong, Grace Chun, Josephine Luck, Mabel Moy, Mary Jean Chan, Marylin Leung, May Young Chin, Ruby Wong, Sharyne Moy, Sun Yee Moy, Ying Ye Lee, and Yuk Chi Lay.
To honor their stories, we are presenting a special installation to share these recorded histories alongside printed materials, displayed in the museum’s south-facing windows on our second floor. This initiative amplifies the voices and experiences of Chinatown’s women, whose contributions remain underrepresented in historical discourse.
In collaboration with Music of Asian America Research Center, we have also curated a special playlist, highlighting the diverse sonic landscapes shaped by women’s voices and artistry from the 1930s to the 1960s. We invite you to listen and engage with these powerful narratives.
Now listen to the “New Women” Playlist curated by Eric Hung, Music of Asian America Research Center: https://tinyurl.com/ShanghaiSongs
Selected Work
Percy Lam: Light Light Light Show
As a proud partner site of Open House Chicago 2025, we are excited to debut Percy Lam's “Light Light Light Show” this Saturday, October 18!
Lam's depictions of Hong Kong, through diverse techniques and materials, explore his complex relationship with a city he still thinks of as home, even long after immigrating to the US. By recreating the city’s buildings and skylines in his laborious weaving, sewing, and neon works, Lam builds bridges between his past and present as a member of the Hong Kong diaspora, gazing back to his homeland from afar, and repeatedly revisiting the connections.
Lam's current work highlights Hong Kong’s disappearing neon culture, unique housing phenomenon, and recent social unrest. The weaving gestures towards mending, a symbolic redress for the keen sense of lost identity that comes from a long-term disconnection.
@perzykamlok was born and raised in Hong Kong, and immigrated to the U.S. with his family as a teenager. Lam is a fiber-based artist, and his practice focuses on explorations of his remote relationship to Hong Kong while he is currently located in the U.S.
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Open House Chicago, one of the largest architecture and urban exploration festivals in the world, is happening this weekend! Visit us and more than 200 other sites in 25+ neighborhoods. Check out @chiarchitecture for more details.
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Featured Work:
Millions of Neon Show: The Light of Hong Kong 萬䊹霓虹綉:香港之光
Hand-embroidery on paper, 3 x 3 in (each), 2017-present
The 50 States Journey: HI 五十州之旅:夏威夷州
PEZ wrapper, thread, 33 x 55 in, 2016
Light Light Light 光 光 光
neon, 16 x 24 x 3 in, 2019
Meet the Artist
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Pride Month Special Exhibitions & Events
Curated by Ji Yang
On the afternoon of June 16th, the Chinese American Museum of Chicago (CAMOC) launched its inaugural Pride Month exhibition and event series with a roundtable conversation featuring trans artist Hai-wen Lin, trans leader Alexis Martinez, and a full audience. Martinez, who was born and raised in Chicago’s Chinatown, reflected on coming out as trans and negotiating identity in the community during the 1950s and 1960s. Lin shared the struggles and dilemmas faced by the younger generation of trans people and discussed how trans experiences shape their artistic practices and teaching. The guests also shared their thoughts on common challenges faced by the trans community, such as transphobia and public misunderstanding.
“I think it is wonderful,” Martinez shared. “It is a remarkable opportunity to be included in the history of the neighborhood, especially stories related to queer people.”
The Pride Month program, curated by Ji Yang, is a collaboration between CAMOC and 6018|North, a Chicago-based artist-centered nonprofit platform. The program aims to highlight queer experiences within the Chinese American community through art, storytelling, and conversation. Along with the conversation, CAMOC launched an LGBTQ-themed special exhibition featuring works from Hai-wen Lin, Taiwanese artist Eugene I-Peng Tang, and China-born artist Linye Jiang. The artworks experiment with various media and techniques, combining sculptures, video choreography, and AI technology to explore themes of acceptance, stigma, racialized bodies, and transitions.
Two more events will soon follow the opening. On June 30th, from 2–5 pm, Eugene I-Peng Tang will share his work experience with Hotline Association, a queer service and activist group in Taiwan. Tang will provide an overview of queer activism in Taiwan and offer personal reflections on solidarity building, community outreach, and challenges. He will also read an excerpt from Grandma's Girlfriends, the Splendid Youth of Elder Lesbians, a nonfiction collection of elderly lesbian life stories co-authored by Tang. He will further share the interview process and elaborate on the history of lesbian experiences in Taiwan.
On July 7th, also from 2–5 pm, Linye Jiang will share her father’s story and her own journey of queer exploration. At fourteen, Jiang accidentally discovered her father’s closeted identity when she found his account on Tianya forum, once the most popular online forum among the first generation of Chinese internet users. Using this account, her father had anonymously published a gay novel based on his experiences titled Shenzhen Stories. Jiang will reflect on queer experiences in digital spaces and online writings in early 2000s China through her father’s experience. She will also discuss her perspective as a daughter living with a closeted man and its influence on her own queer journey and artistic practices in the United States.
The Chinatown Museum Foundation (CMF) DBA Chinese American Museum of Chicago – Raymond B. and Jean T. Lee Center is governed by the Board of Directors of a 501(c)(3) non- profit corporation. Founded in 2005, CAMOC is dedicated to the advancement in the appreciation of Chinese American culture and its contributions as an important part of the American fabric. It does this through exhibitions, education, and research to preserve the past, present, and future of Chinese Americans primarily in the Midwest.
The Pride Month program will continue through July 13th, 2024. The Chinese American Museum of Chicago is currently open Wednesdays and Fridays from 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., Saturdays and Sundays from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Masks are optional.