Sixties Surreal

2025

A large sun with a face and sharp teeth is surrounded by snakes, scorpions, and patterned designs.

Rowan Diaz-Toth: I'm Rowan Diaz-Toth. I am currently a Curatorial Project Assistant at the Whitney Museum of Art for Sixties Surreal. Cheng is an artist who was born in Havana, Cuba, but moved to New York City when he was a young boy.

Narrator: Sun Drawing is an early work, which Cheng made while getting his BFA at Cooper Union in Manhattan’s East Village. 

Rowan Diaz-Toth: It's this drawing that I think when you look at it, it looks on its surface like a dorm room poster from the 1960s or 1970s, like classic psychedelia. But when you look closely at just the entire drawing, you see that there's all these little cell-like wriggling, microbial little shapes that are around the sun, they're inside the face of the sun, and the whole drawing just kind of explodes into them.

And he was also at the time getting into this, what would be a lifelong following of Taoism, which is an ancient Chinese spiritual and religious belief system and a philosophical system as well. He would consider painting really foremostly a spiritual practice throughout his life, and that would manifest itself in different ways. But here it's definitely manifested as this way of working also through a lot of anxieties that he was dealing with at the time.

And he, like a lot of other artists in this gallery, were dealing with that death by, I think looking deeply into their subconscious and looking deeply into these not organized religion so much, but either playing with organized religion and turning it on its head, or looking into alternative spiritualities, looking into historic and antiquated forms of spirituality.


Ching-ho Cheng, Sun Drawing, 1967. Fiber-tipped pen on paper on board, 20 × 20in. (50.8 × 50.8 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; gift of the Ching Ho Cheng Estate 2010.46. © 2025 Ching Ho Cheng Estate/ Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

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