Gilbert Leong
Gilbert Lester Leong was a Chinese-American architect who designed churches and public buildings in the Los Angeles area. He was the first Chinese-American to graduate from USC with a degree in architecture. His designs helped shape the architecture of postwar Los Angeles and Chinatown. Leong was also a co-founder of the East West Bank in 1973. The bank was set up to serve the Chinese American community in Southern California.
Education
- Leong studied painting and sculpture at Chouinard Art Institute under Millard Sheets
- USC degree in architecture
Career
Exhibitions
- In 1936 the work of Leong was featured at the Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art. The exhibition was entitled "Oriental Artists".
- In 2012 Steven Wong and Floridia Cheung highlighted Leong's work at the Chinese American Museum in an exhibit called "Breaking Ground", alongside three contemporaneous Chinese American architects active in Los Angeles: Eugene Kinn Choy, Helen Liu Fong, and Gin D. Wong.
Designs
- Tract homes for builder George Ponty in the Ponty-Vanowen and Ponty-Anaheim developments.
- Homes for Judge Delbert Wong and Dr. Miguel Tirado in the Silver Lake neighborhood of Los Angeles.
- Interior court and authentic Chinese garden in the Pacific Asian Museum in Pasadena. Co-designed
- Logo for the Chinese Historical Society of Southern California
Personal
Leong married Florence "Sissee" See in 1942; she was the daughter of Chinatown businessman Fong See and the great-aunt of novelist Lisa See, who documented the family's history in her memoir On Gold Mountain at Sissee's request. Leslee Leong, the daughter of Gilbert and Florence, inherited the F. Suie One Co., which had been founded by Fong See.