No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeArchiveFrom Farmer’s Son to Celebrated Artist

From Farmer’s Son to Celebrated Artist

At 72, Costa Rican artist Isidro Con Wong still finds inspiration in his childhood calligraphy lessons.He likes to say it was that early exposure to Oriental brush and ink that made him an artist.

Born in Costa Rica to Chinese parents, Con Wong spent his early years listening to folktales of China and studying Cantonese with his mother. Although not an artist herself, the mother recognized her son’s talent and encouraged his doodling.

Con Wong’s father, on the other hand, had little patience for the arts. Like many other fathers of his time, the strict patriarch wanted his son to succeed in the family’s farming and shoe businesses.

The artist still laughs when he recalls his father’s glee at the end of his first show more than 30 years ago. Not a single painting had sold, but instead of helping his son, the influential and rich father scorned him, saying, “You can have your old job at the shoe factory back, but only if you ask for it.”

Con Wong fared better at a second show a few years later. A German collector bought the whole collection – but only because the paintings went for $1.50 a piece.

Despite the lack of reception at the beginning of his career, Con Wong persisted with his unique and wonderful art. His painted scenes of the Costa Rican countryside are like childhood fantasies. There are mangoes the size of the moon and miniature cows dangling on tree branches. Chinese characters are camouflaged as multicolored vines, and volcanoes spew petals.

As a free spirit and self-taught artist, Con Wong cares little about trends and critics.

“I only follow the trend of my heart,” he says. “I paint not to conform or please others but to give form to my inner voice.”

The artist says he has felt the magic of art running through him since he was a child, but it was only at 40 that he was able to bring this potential to fruition.

“At 40 it was not easy to make a name for myself,” he recalls. “My works were different and offered little frame of reference for the public.”

Recognition may have been scarce in the beginning, but this is no longer so. Today, Con Wong’s paintings are exhibited not only throughout Latin America but also in the United States, Europe and China.

At home in Costa Rica, the artist’s name is as recognizable as that of national art icon Rafa Fernández. Elsewhere, his paintings make up part of the permanent collections of the International Museum of Naïf Art in Paris, the LatinAmericanMuseum in Monaco and the Taipei Museum of Art in Taiwan.

In 1988, the artist won the International Grand Prix of Contemporary Art in Monte Carlo and caught the attention of Princess Caroline of Monaco. Con Wong was asked to stay in Europe, but could not bear living far from his beloved Puntarenas, the port city on Costa Rica’s Pacific coast.

Despite international success, the artist remains humble and true to his farmer’s roots. Like all farmers, Con Wong likes to date events according to the seasons. To him, the joyful naïf paintings of the 1980s and ’90s were part of his spring and summer periods, in which colorful canvases overflow with trees, flowers and omnipresent virile bulls.

The early 2000s were marked by black abstract paintings, representing fall and winter for the artist. On these canvases, a multitude of black organic forms play against a black background. Despite the lack of colors, the black paintings are no less lyrical than his earlier works.

In recent years, Con Wong says he has been working on a period of transition‚ with the comeback of colors and bulls perhaps heralding the return of spring.

The artist will be hosting the opening night of his newest exhibit March 16 at 7 p.m., in the Tribu building in San Antonio de Belén, west of San José. The ultramodern complex, with its open spaces and natural lighting, promises to be an interesting backdrop for Con Wong’s canvases. The show will include past works as well as some new paintings, and will run for two months. For more information and directions to the building, call Milenia Gamboa at 209-7766.

Last month, Con Wong spoke with The Tico Times about his childhood, art and life.

Excerpts:

TT: How did your upbringing influence your art?

ICW: I was born second-generation Chinese. At home, my parents kept the Chinese culture. We were more than 60 Chinese living in one big house in Puntarenas. It was like a little Chinatown in the heart of the Costa Rican port. For me, China was my house, and when I opened the front door, Costa Rica was outside. The two cultures became part of my subconscious and made me what I am today.

Which artists influence you the most?

I am fascinated by Vincent van Gogh. All artists are interesting to me each time I have a chance to see their works. Such encounters make me want to scream, “Long live art! Long live humanity! Long live mankind!”

How would you describe your style?

My style is very personal and different. Many art critics have catalogued me as a naïf painter. But personally, I don’t consider myself as such. I believe the spirit and sensibility of a naïf painter exists in all human beings. For this reason, I don’t object to this classification.

How do you explain the transformation from colorful paintings to black canvases?

As a kid, I enjoyed dark nights as much as days full of sunlight. They are two different landscapes, yet they are the same.More than half of my works are southern landscapes. Now they are abstract and black landscapes. As a kid, I looked at the black nights as being full of surprises; they were like celestial orbits giving way to the infinite. Now my black monochromes give me great creative freedom. Many people think of black as the absence of color, but for me it is the sum of all the colors.

What advice would you give to budding artists starting to paint for the first time at age 40?

I would say 40 is a great age and an ideal time to change careers – to let loose the hidden artist in you.

 

Trending Now

Costa Rica Moves to Protect Jobs at Golfito Free Trade Zone

Costa Rica’s Legislative Assembly approved a reform this week that gives commercial operators inside the Depósito Libre Comercial de Golfito something they have sought...

Mexico vs South Africa Headlines World Cup 2026 Opening Day

After four years of waiting, the 2026 FIFA World Cup kicks off today, with the biggest and most expanded edition of the tournament in...

Costa Rican Chorreador Reaches Pope Leo XIV in Gift Rooted in Coffee Tradition

A Costa Rican chorreador, one of our country’s most familiar coffee brewers, has reached an unlikely destination: the hands of Pope Leo XIV. The...

Costa Rica’s Forgotten WWII Role Echoes on D-Day’s 82nd Anniversary

Eighty-two years ago today, roughly 160,000 Allied troops landed in Normandy, France, launching Operation Overlord to liberate German-occupied Western Europe — the single day...

Flesh Eating Fly That Spread Through Costa Rica Has Reached Texas

For decades, a small facility in Panama stood between the United States cattle industry and one of the most destructive parasites in the Western...

Mariale Acosta Crowned Miss Universe Costa Rica 2026

Mariale Acosta was crowned Miss Universe Costa Rica 2026 on Friday night at the Costa Rica Convention Center, completing a comeback that had made...

Costa Rica Tax Revenue Keeps Falling as UNA Economists Urge Fiscal Reform

A public university research center has called a comprehensive fiscal reform "necessary and urgent," warning that Costa Rica's tax revenue has been sliding since...

Documentary Highlights Costa Rica’s Howler Monkey Crisis

There is a sound that defines the Costa Rican jungle before dawn: a deep, resonant roar that can carry for five kilometers through the...

French Open 2026 Women’s Final Set: How to Watch in Costa Rica

Roland Garros will crown a first-time Grand Slam women's singles champion this weekend after 19-year-old Mirra Andreeva and Polish qualifier Maja Chwalińska won Thursday's...
Avatar
🌴 The Weekly Pura Vida

Costa Rica, Once a Week

The week's top stories, weather & insider tips — delivered every Sunday. One email, zero clutter.

🔒 Free. No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.

Loading…

Latest News from Costa Rica

Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Car Rentals
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Travel