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Annie Ng '20
This piece uses classical aesthetics to explore man’s grief and natural processes, exploring the idea that humans can create, inform, and be nature.
2017
Charcoal and Pencil on Paper
By Annie Ng '20
A colorful view of buildings and the sky over Florence (Firenze).
2014
Oil Paint on Canvas
Photojournalistic exploration of the human impact of rhino poaching in South Africa – done in Prof Sue McConnell’s overseas seminar in Summer 2016.
Link to Website
2016
Photographs
Thousands of stippled dots layer on each other to create each gargoyle and rooftop, coming together to reveal the magnificent, historical spire.
2020
Pen and Ink
Hide my anger behind flowers // my anxiety behind moths // my sadness behind â–“â–“â–“
2018
Photoshop
This is a surreal meditation on nature’s comforting power as a sanctuary for people in need of healing.
2022
Pencil on paper
This piece depicts how the new digital, photo-sharing era fetishizes Asian women against their will, especially in their traditional attire.
Linoleum Block Print on Paper
A study on ephemeral hands, and an attempt to capture desperate grasping.
Gesso on card.
These two small paintings feature a whimsical image that explores feminine sexuality, inspired by the flesh-like quality of oil paint.
oil on cnavs
This piece highlights the importance of community and hope in the midst of a pandemic, despite physical separation from others.
Acrylic on Canvas
The cellphone becomes a monumental, invasive aspect of experiences (especially in nature), yet is so integral in shaping memories.
2019
iPhone photographs, collaged on Photoshop
A little boy reaches out to the diver on the other side of the aquarium glass, encapsulated within this innocent moment of hope and harmony.
Acrylic Paint on Canvas
Mice own your belongings at night.
Charcoal Pencil on Paper
This project was done on a ten-day summer trip to my family’s ranch.
Environmental Photographs
Who are our parents before our births? I wanted to use painting to meditate on loss concretized as memory.
Oil on Canvas
This song is a unique take on John Coltrane’s ‘Impressions’ in terms of instrumentation, style, and genre.
Guitar recording with electronic drums and synths
As a landscape photographer, I like to see things in different light. These represent my personal interpretation of Stanford.
Photo
I play hide and seek with the scars from a clumsy childhood that my Korean family always told me to hide.
2021
The ocean stirs the heart, inspires the imagination and brings eternal joy to the soul. –Robert Wyland
2023
Digital Media – Made in Procreate for Apple iPad
This piece depicts a fictionalized memory of my grandfather, who I only knew through his woven hats and birds passed down through my family.
[how I avoid winter quarter: experiments with colors and a palette knife]