Crosstown Arts is hosting a small group discussion with Walking Eyes collaborators, Kong Wee Pang and Jay Crum. This free event is open to the public.
If you are interested in attending, please email emily@crosstownarts.org to RSVP.
Crosstown Arts is hosting a small group discussion with Walking Eyes collaborators, Kong Wee Pang and Jay Crum. This free event is open to the public.
If you are interested in attending, please email emily@crosstownarts.org to RSVP.
Walking Eyes is a collaborative exhibition by Kong Wee Pang and Jay Crum. Inspired by a month spent in Southeast Asia, each piece was developed through exchanges of ideas and sketches between the two artists. The work is informed by personal memories, hand-drawn maps, tropical flora, and Batik patterns. Many of the pieces have high levels of details with hidden treasures to encourage exploration. The show includes a collection of mixed-media works on paper and fabric, as well as an installation.
Collaborators in life and art, Kong Wee and Jay thoughtfully balance married life, creative exploration and professional growth through ongoing ventures like the playful TaroPop Studio, which they co-founded in 2009.
Please join us for refreshments in the gallery to celebrate the exhibition, and visit the Walking Eyes page for more information.
Walking Eyes is a collaborative exhibition by Kong Wee Pang and Jay Crum. Inspired by a month spent in Southeast Asia, each piece was developed through exchanges of ideas and sketches between the two artists. The work is informed by personal memories, hand-drawn maps, tropical flora, and Batik patterns. Many of the pieces have high levels of details with hidden treasures to encourage exploration. The show includes a collection of mixed-media works on paper and fabric, as well as an installation.
Collaborators in life and art, Kong Wee and Jay thoughtfully balance married life, creative exploration and professional growth through ongoing ventures like the playful TaroPop Studio, which they co-founded in 2009.

Kong Wee Pang is a designer/artist from Malaysia. She graduated from Singapore Nanyang Academy of Fine Art. In 2001 she moved to the United States. She received a degree in fine art and design and an MFA from the Memphis College of Art. She currently works as an art director at the mid-south’s largest ad agency, archer>malmo. Her work has been shown in NYC’s Times Square, Spain, Italy, Berlin, Atlanta, Memphis and California.
Kong Wee on her practice:
My work is concerned with transformation. Coming from Malaysia, I have learned to adapt to a new way of life here in the United States. I exist in a liminal state living in two worlds. I have focused upon the notion of original self, outside influences and transmutation. Working with watercolor is meaningful to me. In Chinese we have a saying which translates roughly to “When you drink water, remember the spring.” The abstracted figures give me a chance to face my new freedom while remembering where I come from. It is found in translation.
Jay Crum is a designer, illustrator and artist. He was born in New Orleans, LA and currently lives in Memphis, TN. He received a BFA in printmaking in 2005 and has since been navigating the line where art and design meet. In 2009 he co-founded TaroPop, a small studio producing T-shirt designs and limited-edition art-prints. He received his MFA at Memphis College of Art in 2012. He has exhibited work in Memphis, Rome and Barcelona.
Filling a hospital with art has been shown to support the well-being of patients, families and staff. The use of color and imagery can create a healing environment that lowers stress and anxiety and can also be used to encourage rehabilitation. Each art program at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital is aimed at promoting healing, transforming the hospital experience and bringing joy. The hospital’s commitment to filling the environment with local art is seen throughout campus in murals, paintings and prints, sculpture, mosaics, flooring and colorful designs.
Six years ago, a new tower was built and named the Chili’s Care Center. Instead of filling the corridors with murals, hospital planners opted to populate each floor with framed artwork consisting of pieces from local artists and patients, as well as photographs that would be displayed in custom-made, colorful frames unique to the tower’s interior. While the tower was under construction, several local artists moved into it, set up studios and created a large body of work for the project.
Together, with art produced by patients and images created by St. Jude photographers, hundreds of pieces were permanently displayed in the corridors of every floor within the tower. Today, patients, families and staff walking the halls experience art created for them and by them; these individuals also view photos of themselves and of those who support them.
Because of the success of the Chili’s Care Center art program, hospital planners decided that the next tower, currently under construction and known as “Tower 2,” would house a similar art program. Seven artists were invited to participate in the Tower 2 Project. Jeanne Seagle, Lurlynn Franklin and Janet Beaver were three artists from the original group who were asked to participate in this new project.
The remaining four were Kong wee Pang, Jay Crum, Alex Warble and Danny Broadway. Seagle, Beaver, Broadway and Warble set up studios on campus, while the remaining three worked from their personal studios. All of the artists participated in tours and were given open access to explore and experience the campus and the people. They were also provided color samples of the new tower’s interior and encouraged to not only pull from their experience at St. Jude, but to also create work that might draw the viewer in to find something new.
Each artist participated in at least one “painting party” with patients and families. These parties were designed not only to fill the new tower with patient work, but also to provide artists, patients and families with a fun and therapeutic experience. The artists together produced more than 100 pieces during their four-week residency, while patients and families produced more than 100 paintings during their seven painting parties.
HEALING SPACE is a sample of the work produced during the Tower 2 Project. This show displays the pieces for public view before permanent installation while illustrating the importance of color and connection in a therapeutic environment.
-Youngblood Studio, LLC