Media Features​​​​​​​
Articles & Interviews
"In six weeks, they turned a cohort of 80 students into budding artists, musicians, and vocalists. Wang took students to the former Monterey Café, inviting them to reimagine it at a time when the building’s future still hangs in limbo."
"That was also true for 10-year-old Cassidy Streeter, a rising sixth grader at Elm City College Preparatory Academy. In addition to learning about the music of the Harlem Renaissance, she said that she loved getting to make all of her artwork “from scratch” under Powell and Wang’s guidance. "
"Chinese Dinner" was selected for Yale Schwarzman Center's gallery "on homecoming." Homecoming, a season of welcoming and inviting, is a familiar part of university life. Beyond the sporting events, dances, and reunions, it’s a celebration of belonging—a declaration of having found a home. This exhibition features a mix of ruminations on homecoming submitted by Yale's undergraduate, graduate, and professional students.
After visiting Noir Vintage & Company in downtown New Haven during Camp Yale, Katelyn Wang ’27 and Johan Zongo ’27 were inspired to design a mural for the store owner Evelyn Massey.
“As a public artist, one thing I focus on is making art for the community,” said Wang. “It’s really weird to use someone else’s space as your own canvas. There’s a keen awareness of making sure you’re creating for someone else. … You want to make sure that [the community] remains at the core of your creation.”
“We had just started conceptualizing the idea for this project,” said Murals of La Jolla curatorial assistant Taylor Chapin. “The timing of [Wang’s] reaching out to us worked out great. Her enthusiasm, interest in the arts and skills as an artist seemed like the perfect fit, and we were thrilled that she wanted to jump on board to assist with this project.”
“Art breaches a lot of barriers, it unites us...at the end of the day, we all just want to be equal. The idea of justice should be beneficial to all of us.”
Newsletter by The Tower on my work exploring social justice and implementing it in personal communities. “I will never forget who I truly am: a San Diego advocate, nurtured on the Bishop’s campus, seasoned in Convoy, with a mind of infinite ambitions.”
Interviewed as Senior Class President Representative of The Bishop's School to share thoughts on the future of La Jolla. I reflected on the arts community in La Jolla and its impact on my academic, creative, and personal pursuits.
School coverage on my murals around campus!
"United Fight" was selected as the Featured Work for the art collection Apricity: Breaking the Glass organized by The Zora Foundation. This collection focuses on social discrimination awareness while using art to inspire important conversations.