Art + Belonging, Opening Doors to the World

COUNTERPANES

ANNE WU
Fisher Gallery
January 13 - July 1, 2025
Anne Wu, Fiber and Mixed Media Artist
Public Reception
February 7, 2025, 4p - 6p
Artist remarks begin at 4:30p

What is revealed at the confluence of tradition and creative practice?

Anne Wu’s work honors the conventions and practical objectives of traditional quilt-making, yet effects contemporary relevance by challenging those same strictures through alternate interpretations, materials, and techniques to explore and expand the foundational concept of using scrape and labor to keep family warm.

Her art quilts are accessible, seemingly simple, yet dizzyingly complex, whose ultimate significance is the creation of meaning.

Anne Wu was born and raised in Worthington, OH and is an established exhibiting artist working out of northern New Mexico. Curiosity inspires her to explore a variety of media and techniques to create dimensional objects and installations. Wu is the granddaughter of Chinese master artist Woo Chong Yung (Wu Zhongxiong/C.Y. Woo, 1898 – 1989) whose paintings are held in The Frank Museum permanent global art collection.


Thank you to our sponsors for their ongoing support of our global arts and interdisciplinary exhibitions and programming.

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Current Exhibitions

  • 7th Annual Juried High School Art Exhibition

    Miller Gallery
    November 23 – December 5, 2025
    The purpose of Otterbein’s Annual Juried High School Exhibition is to learn about and to support High School artists in Ohio and the contiguous states.
  • Paper Cosmologies

    Hiromi Mizugai Moneyhun’s Floating Worlds
    Frank Museum of Art
    January 8 – April 23, 2026
    Paper Cosmologies draws on Florida-based Japanese artist Hiromi Mizugai Moneyhun’s (水貝 宏美) Ukiyo and Emergence series, which turn single sheets of washi paper into universes that refuse a frame. Through kirie (切り絵)—the ancient and painstaking Japanese art of paper cutting—Moneyhun realizes complex and fantastical worlds where female figures inherit the elegance of bijin-ga (美人画) beauty, even as they emerge, entangle, and transform into animals, architecture, and landscapes. The diaphanous, yet commanding and playful paper forms ask: “What if our ideas of separation are an illusion?”
  • Ukiyoe’s Living Legacy: The Yoshida Family Prints

    Frank Museum of Art
    August 20 – December 5, 2025
    From the Meiji period (1868-1912) to the present day, the Yoshida family has carried forward a printmaking tradition rooted in the aesthetics of ukiyo-e, a genre of Japanese art that flourished during the Edo period (1603-1867) and that depicted transient pleasures and everyday life of the urban population. Beginning with work by the patriarch Hiroshi Yoshida (1876-1950), this exhibition samples the Yoshida family’s artistic re-imagining of ukiyo-e through modern and contemporary periods. The works on view from the Flaten Art Museum demonstrate technical mastery and an ongoing negotiation between past and present, tradition and innovation, place and personhood.