Overlooked No More, Walasse Ting, Who Bridged Cultures With Paint and Prose

by Vanst
Overlooked No More, Walasse Ting, Who Bridged Cultures With Paint and Prose

This article is part of Overlooked, a series of obituaries about remarkable people whose deaths, beginning in 1851, went unreported in The Times.

Flickering among the major figures of postwar art — the Minimalist sculptor Dan Flavin, the avant-garde artist Pierre Alechinsky, the abstract painter Sam Francis and others — is the radiant shadow of Walasse Ting.

Ting, a painter and poet from China, introduced Flavin to Japanese ink. He turned Alechinsky on to acrylic paint. Together, he and Francis explored the interplay between Western action painting and Asian brush techniques.

In an era when artists were typically siloed by geography and genre, Ting broke free, effortlessly creating fertile connections wherever he went. His own work, at its best, melded the elegance and delicacy of traditional Chinese ink painting with an eye-grabbing palette equally influenced by American Pop Art and the lurid colors of the Florida aviary he frequented, Parrot Jungle (now Jungle Island) in West Palm Beach.

Learning to paint in Shanghai, traveling to the avant-garde circles of Paris and settling among the Pop-fueled studios of New York gave him a rare, firsthand fluency in multiple visual languages. In each city, he absorbed and reshaped the dominant styles around him before adeptly collapsing the distances among them all.

Walasse (pronounced Wallace) Ting was born Ting Hiong Tchuan on Oct. 13, 1928, in Wuxi, China, near Shanghai, the youngest of three sons of Ting Ho Ching and Ying Ping Si, who owned and managed factories that made boxes and other things.

Though he was enrolled for a couple of years at the Shanghai College of Fine Arts, he was never much of a student — he later called himself “self-taught” — and, in any case, China was still reeling from the civil war between the Communists and the Nationalists. At the urging of his father, who foresaw the eventual triumph of the Communist Party in 1949, Ting left mainland China and traveled around Asia for two years before arriving in Hong Kong in 1951. There, he stayed with a wealthy uncle and, in 1952, had his first art exhibit, “Modern Paintings of Eastern and Western Styles.”

The next year, he took a boat to France, arriving in Marseilles, and from there made his way to Paris, where he adopted the name Walasse, with a spelling that evoked Henri Matisse and a sound reminiscent of a childhood nickname meaning “spoiled.”

Ting started out washing cars at a garage, laughing when French customers, using a condescending term for Chinese men, addressed him as Charlie. But soon he befriended Asger Jorn, Karel Appel and Alechinsky, painters of the Cobra group, an expressionistic movement that focused on color and vitality. (The group’s name refers to Copenhagen, Brussels and Amsterdam, the cities from which its founders came.) Later, he and Alechinsky collaborated on hundreds of explosively energetic paintings that they called “Alechings.”

Ting arrived in New York in 1957 and had his debut show of black-on-white action paintings in 1959. He befriended Claes Oldenburg, Joan Mitchell and Sam Francis, and introduced many other artists to one another at raucous dinner parties he hosted. He ate hot and sour soup with Oldenburg and the painter Tom Wesselmann and served as a kind of mentor to a group of Taiwanese poets who respectfully called him “Lao Ting,” or “Old Ting.” He helped Ming Fay and other Chinese artists in America find exhibition opportunities and continued visiting Paris, ferrying ideas and techniques between the two art capitals.

But though his own work was collected by major museums and exhibited regularly, Ting’s career was hampered because “he wasn’t Chinese enough for the Chinese or American enough for the Americans,” in the words of Ariella Wolens, who curated his first institutional solo show in the United States, in 2023 at the NSU Art Museum Fort Lauderdale, Fla. (part of Nova Southeastern University).

His daughter Mia Ting said in a phone interview, “Even when things weren’t going great for him, he was very self-assured, so I think he gave confidence to a lot of people.”

The most tangible monument to Ting is his 1964 book, “1¢ Life,” a collection of 60 color lithographs by a cross-section of 1960s artists, most of the works set above original poems, which he wrote in a style that transposed the distinctive compression of classical Chinese into English.

From Andy Warhol came four glistening grimacing mouths floating over Mr. Ting’s poem “Jade White Butterfly.” Roy Lichtenstein’s two-page spread presented a smiling blond woman in his signature Ben-Day dots and a close-up of a spray can. Kiki Kogelnik designed a collaged red rocket to carry Ting’s poem “Orange Naked Woman” into space. Joan Mitchell contributed an energetic black cloud, and Ting himself made a sensual yellow and red odalisque.

Wesselmann’s Pop Art riff on the American flag appeared above a particularly telegraphic text:

“STOMACH SUNK IN WHISKY / PEE INSIDE PANTS / I SAW A LITTLE STAR / WHERE IS MY BABY TONIGHT.”

Two thousands copies of “1¢ Life” were published by the Swiss gallerist and art historian Eberhard Kornfeld, with expenses underwritten by the Detroit collector Florence Barron. The book was a hit. It has been exhibited regularly and is in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art and the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.

Ting’s prolific artistic practice passed through many phases. The NSU Art Museum show, “Walasse Ting: Parrot Jungle,” included a series of narrow green acrylic and ink paintings on paper nearly six feet tall. On one, a parrot with a round, light green head seems to float on a single twig-like foot, its powder blue wing wrapped around its shoulder like a cloak. In another, a parrot with an orange head and yellow breast trails a broad rainbow tail.

There are heavy, wet-looking carp, explosively colorful flowers, exuberant crayon grasshoppers, hulking cats, a flat, eye-searing watermelon — in short, a whole natural world that sparkles as if reflected in a brook. In “Green Peacock,” a lone bird’s tail, rendered in a rich green and marked in ink with a herringbone pattern and dotted, like a plum tree, with royal blue spots, fills a sheet of paper eight feet long. Ting made drip paintings à la Jackson Pollock, but with brighter, more accessible colors; portraits, deconstructed à la Willem de Kooning; and many explicit nudes.

What united them all was Ting’s prescient insight that an artist could draw from every culture he came across. Bright acrylic colors don’t exist in traditional ink painting, but they can be applied with an ink painter’s sensibility, and the same fluid line, thoughtfully applied, can evoke both cursive Chinese characters and Matisse.

Ting married Natalie Lipton, a painter and commercial artist, in 1962. He began showing with Lefebre Gallery in Manhattan in 1963. Along with Lipton and their children, Mia and Jesse, he was one of the original tenants of the Westbeth, a subsidized housing community for artists in the West Village.

Later in life, Ting made visits to China and showed more frequently around Asia.

He died on May 17, 2010, at a long-term care facility in Manhattan. He was 81. The death, which was not widely reported at the time, was caused by complications of a cerebral hemorrhage.

Ting self-published several volumes of poetry, one of which was translated from classical Chinese. All were written in the same stripped-down, billboard-like English.

“All Kinds of Love,” which appeared in “1¢ Life” under a two-page spread by Oldenburg of a female profile glaring at a giant slice of cake, begins:

parent love children as summer garden hold tree
husband love wife as long distance call
husband love mistress as rainbow in pocket
girl love man as open dream

“Black Stone,” written for Sam Francis and appearing under a thrilling two-page spread of primary-colored splashes and dots, ends with the lines:

“WHO SAY NO BEAUTY IN THIS WORLD / WHO SAY NO TRUTH ON EARTH”

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