Christopher Wong Won, a.k.a. Fresh Kid Ice of the hip-hop group 2 Live Crew, in 2015 at the Black Cat in the District. Mr. Wong Won died July 13 in Miami. (Kris Connor/Getty Images)

Christopher Wong Won, a founding member of the Miami hip-hop group 2 Live Crew whose sexually explicit lyrics triggered a national debate over the legal limits of artistic freedom, died July 13 at a Veterans Affairs hospital in Miami. He was 53.

The group’s manager, DJ Debo, said Mr. Wong Won, known as Fresh Kid Ice, had suffered from unspecified medical ailments for several years.

2 Live Crew gained fame in the 1980s and 1990s for its Miami bass sound, sexually explicit lyrics and legal challenges.

A judge in Florida ruled that the group’s 1989 album “As Nasty As They Wanna Be” was obscene, leading to the arrest of a record store owner who refused to stop selling it. Mr. Wong Won and 2 Live Crew frontman Luther “Luke” Campbell also were arrested after performing songs from the album at a show in Hollywood, Fla.

A federal appeals court later overturned the obscenity ruling, and the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear further arguments in the case from the group’s critics.

The Supreme Court sided with 2 Live Crew in 1994 in a separate case, ruling they had the right to parody other artists after they were sued for sampling the Roy Orbison song “Oh, Pretty Woman” on a clean version of “As Nasty As They Wanna Be.”

The group’s 1990 album “Banned in the USA” was the first to be sold with a “parental advisory” label warning about its content.

“They paved the way for a lot of artists to be able to do what they do on records now,” Debo said. “They fought in court for people to say what they want to say.”

Christopher Wong Won was born in 1964 in Port-of-Spain, Trinidad, and his family moved to Brooklyn in 1977. He was hip-hop’s first notable rapper of Asian descent, and he titled his first solo album “The Chinaman.”

Mr. Wong Won told Vice last year that many 2 Live Crew fans didn’t know he was Asian until their music videos were released.

“The Asians were there in the beginning of hip-hop — but as DJs,” he said in the Vice interview. “We’ve been in the background and stayed behind the scenes, but we learn from our mistakes. A lot of people see us as being passive, but sometimes being passive means that you’re learning. Right now, I see us right there with everyone else.”

Mr. Wong Won co-founded 2 Live Crew in California in 1984. A couple years later, the group moved to Miami and was joined by Campbell.

After the group broke up, Mr. Wong Won released several solo albums. In recent years, he reunited with 2 Live Crew members for several performances. His memoir, “My Rise 2 Fame,” was published in 2015.

— Associated Press