
Edward Swyer, and Chester and Karen Opalka. Major support is provided by Eleanor Holbritter Nasner and Margaret F. Leading support has been provided by Omni Development Company, Inc., the Taiwanese American Cultural Society of the Capital District, the University at Albany Foundation, Dorice Brickman, Mr. This exhibition is presented by the Taipei Cultural Center in New York, Ministry of Culture, Republic of China (Taiwan). Wen’s works are held in many private and public museum collections, in the permanent collection of the United States Embassy in Barbados, and the American Institute in Taiwan. but also internationally, in curatorial and collectors' circles, for her achievements and the unique character of her work. artists invited to the White House’s annual arts and culture reception, Wen is an artist held in high esteem not only across the U.S. A frequent nominee to a select list of sixty U.S. In addition, Wen was awarded Artist Grants by the Pollock-Krasner Foundation in 19 and was invited by then-First Lady Laura Bush and Secretary of State Colin Powell to visit the White House in 2005. In 2001, She won the Lorenzo de Medici Award at the Florence Biennale. In 2000, she was again awarded a New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship and The Helena Rubinstein Fellowship. Wen was awarded a 1997 New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship and was honored to be the Artist of New York State by the New York State Legislature. She has exhibited in eighteen American embassies, consulates, and other government institutions located in countries such as Jordan, Malaysia, Singapore, Namibia, Botswana, Philippines, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Denmark, and Poland. She received her MFA from the State University of New York at Albany in 1994 and served as a cultural ambassador envoy during the Clinton, Bush, Obama, Trump, and Biden administrations.

In Motion: The African American Migration Experience.Captured Moments: 170 Years of Photography from the Albany Institute.Wampum World: An Art Installation by Renee Ridgway.2017 Exhibition by Artists of the Mohawk-Hudson Region.Back: A Re-Installation of 19th Century Sculpture by Jack Shear.Well-Dressed in Victorian Albany: 19th Century Fashion from the Albany Institute Collection.Paintings of Addy®: Dahl Taylor's Original Illustrations for American Girl.Along the Eastern Road: Hiroshige's Fifty-Three Stations of the Tokaido.A Menagerie of Whimsey: The Art of William B.Birds & Beasts: The Scary, Magical, and Adorable Animals of the Albany Institute.Bejeweled and Bedazzled: Jewelry and Personal Adornment.Shape and Shadow: The Sculpture of Larry Kagan.Heavy Metal: Cast Iron Stoves of the Capital Region.'An Orphan No More': Recently Discovered Oil Sketch by Anthony Van Dyck.Painting the American Southwest: The Work of Otto Plaug.A Brilliant Bit of Color: The Work of Walter Launt Palmer.Recycled & Refashioned: The Art of Ruby Silvious.Summerland: A Sound Installation by Matthew Ostrowski.

2020 Exhibition by Artists of the Mohawk-Hudson Region.A Fresh Look at Eighteenth-Century Portraits.Fellow Citizens! DeWitt Clinton's Broadsides of the Early Republic.A Sense of Time: The Historical Art of L.The Wyeths: Three Generations | Works from the Bank of America Collection.Romancing the Rails: Train Travel in the 1920s and 1930s.
