Ai Yo!

Ai Yo!

52 O ST NW #302 Washington, DC 20001, USA Wednesday, February 8, 2023–Wednesday, March 8, 2023 Opening Reception: Saturday, February 11, 2023, 4 p.m.–6 p.m.

Continuing an innovative latex paint and time-based practice the artist has been implementing for nearly a decade, Ai Yo! features Wu further exploring composition, color, expertise, control, chance and surprise—favoring discovery over mastery.

briefly inhabit a fictional world by jenny wu

Jenny Wu

Briefly Inhabit a Fictional World, 2022

1,800 USD

70 year old intern waiting for his first real job by jenny wu

Jenny Wu

70 Year Old Intern Waiting for His First Real Job, 2022

3,200 USD

a very stable genius by jenny wu

Jenny Wu

A Very Stable Genius, 2019

1,900 USD

a big day for social media and fairness by jenny wu

Jenny Wu

A Big Day for Social Media and FAIRNESS, 2020

1,300 USD

carefully editing an email response by jenny wu

Jenny Wu

Carefully Editing An Email Response, 2021

1,900 USD

spent $50.4 million on tv ads to brag about giving local businesses a total of $100,000 by jenny wu

Jenny Wu

Spent $50.4 Million on TV Ads to Brag About Giving Local Businesses A Total of $100,000, 2022

3,200 USD

it's not finished but i am by jenny wu

Jenny Wu

It's Not Finished But I Am, 2022

3,200 USD

Morton Fine Art is pleased to announce Ai Yo!, a solo exhibition of sculptural paintings by artist Jenny Wu. Continuing an innovative latex paint and time-based practice the artist has been implementing for nearly a decade, Ai Yo! features Wu further exploring composition, color, expertise, control, chance and surprise—favoring discovery over mastery. Long interested in tactility, in-betweenness, embodiedness, and construction (Wu has a background in architectural studies), the exhibition questions our basic assumptions about what paintings and sculptures can be. Wu’s first solo exhibition with the gallery, Ai Yo!, will be on view from February 8 - March 8, 2023 at Morton’s Washington, D.C. space (52 O St NW #302).


Underpinned by transformation and embodying time, material characteristics and chance, Wu’s sculptural paintings operate as both built objects and records (of labor, gesture, accident). To create each work, Wu pours thick coats of latex paint onto silicone surfaces, allowing each layer to dry completely before adding another layer of latex in turn to dry. The results are rich and vividly varied strata of dried paint, which Wu then cuts to reveal layers of colorful cross-sections, often touched by chance elements like cracking. Using these cross-sections as her base units, Wu assembles her paintings, building up relief and composition—piece by piece—on wood panels. Both the cross-sections and their eventual sculptural forms veer towards an order out of serendipity and planning. Following prearranged patterns, Wu erects pulsing grid-forms and mesmerizing reliefs of playful, shimmering paint, completed with a top coat of glossy resin to amplify her vibrant palette. Transforming latex paint from its original, liquid form—before fashioning it within new contexts and forms—the artworks acknowledge an abiding passion for the sensational and perceptual properties of materiality.


Titles play an important role in Wu’s practice, in some cases mirroring her process of cutting and rearranging layered materials: Too Heavy to Carry to the British Museum (2022);  70 Year Old Intern Waiting for His First Real Job (2022); Hello to That One Person Who Nods Along Encouragingly During Presentations (2022). Sourcing her titles from Twitter (including a number of Donald Trump’s tweets, an approach that ended in 2020), Wu’s titling compounds the humorous and constructive elements explored in Ai Yo!, the meaning of which too is both layered and specific. A regional expression in Nanjing, China, Wu’s hometown, “Ai Yo”’s meaning depends on how you say it, ranging from “impressed” to “suspicious.” Existing only as an expression, there is no character for “Ai Yo”; it can only be said and spoken. Unfixed and open, “Ai Yo” accrues yet an additional context in Wu’s selection of it as her exhibition’s title.


Balancing clarity and surprise, Ai Yo! is the result of countless juxtapositions and an expanding set of contexts.

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Jenny Wu is an artist and educator. She is currently a visiting assistant professor of fine art at Trinity College in Hartford, CT. Wu’s work acknowledges the sensational and perceptual properties of materiality and then transforms the materials from their original forms and purpose to present them within new contexts. Her work has been reviewed by the Washington Post. Her work has been exhibited in galleries and museums including Katzen Museum, Huntington Museum of Art, Reece Museum, Vilnius Academy of Arts in Lithuania, and CICA Museum in South Korea.


Wu has participated in numerous Artist-In-Residence programs across the country; and has been awarded fellowships from Vermont Studio Center and the Pollock Krasner Foundation. Wu was born in Nanjing, China. She holds a B.A. from William Smith College in Studio Art as well as in Architectural Studies, and an M.F.A. in Studio Art from American University. She has been represented by Morton Fine Art since 2021.