Capping off her art education with the BFA show
Xiong and thirteen other graduating seniors have their BFA exhibition on display now in the Foster Gallery of the Haas Fine Arts Center, open for viewing through May 10.
Xiong’s pieces are multimedia in nature, and her exhibit is meant to depict a domestic home scene. Her art, and her process of designing and creating it, is also the topic of her honors thesis.
“My thesis describes the art and how the two pieces came to be, but it also served as a way to directly address my personal experiences growing up as a Hmong American,” Xiong says.
“Creating the art was emotional, and I was able to process those emotions in writing the thesis. I talk about some feelings I’ve carried around my whole life,” Xiong says.
Jyl Kelley, professor of art & design, has been Xiong’s faculty advisor and says it has been a joy watching Xiong’s growth over the last four years “as an artist and as a person.”
“While Luecy has a quiet and gentle demeanor, her visual voice is powerful,” Kelley says.
“Luecy understands how to communicate meaning through image and material with great impact and confidence — there is a real strength in her work that often surprises people, much like a lion beneath a calm exterior.”
After graduating, Xiong is open to a wide range of art-related careers, stopping short of defining a certain lane just yet. Beyond illustration, she says she has enjoyed projects in many areas like graphics, marketing and campaign design.
“Creating for a client is whole different thing, but I am open to that. I’m still figuring it all out,” Xiong says. “The world feels like an uncertain place right now, but I know I want to continue creating art as a means to share stories.”
As Xiong describes her story cloth and the loose trailing thread on the lower edge, “My story doesn’t stop here — it will continue somewhere else. I’m OK not knowing where that is yet.”