The Unlikely Path to Becoming a Realist Portrait Artist at 31
At 31, Fei Meng realized that a life built on “gloss” has no grip. To find her footing, she traded the high-velocity world of luxury PR for the slow, patient impasto of the old masters
- Text by Wendy Guo
- Paintings by Fei Meng
In her ninth year in London, Fei Meng made a bold decision. Until then, her life had been measured in the ephemeral currency of high-end glossies and the luxury industry, a kaleidoscope of social calendars that offered plenty of glitter but little belonging. Late at night, in the hollow silence that follows clamor, a specific anxiety began to take root.
“I felt a void,” she recalls. “I wanted to find the one thing I could commit to for a lifetime.”
The answer emerged from a latent childhood impulse: painting. At 31, an age when the social contract typically demands a doubling down on stability, Meng made a pivot her peers found startling. She abandoned the groomed trajectory of her career to return to the starting line. “If I don’t do it now,” she says, “I might never get the chance again.”
Inspired for a Beautiful Life
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