Shoemakers

Painting

-

anonymous...

Name/Title

Shoemakers

Entry/Object ID

2000.4

Type of Painting

Easel

Artwork Details

Medium

Oil on canvas, Oil, Canvas

Category

American Art, 1945 to Today

Acquisition

Accession

2000.4

Source or Donor

Crocker Art Museum Purchase

Acquisition Method

Purchase

Credit Line

Crocker Art Museum, Collectors' Guild Purchase

Notes

Crocker Art Museum, Collectors' Guild Purchase

Made/Created

Artist

Hung Liu

Date made

1999

Time Period

20th Century

Place

State/Province

California

Country

United States

Continent

North America

Lexicon

Legacy Lexicon

Object Name

Web-Tag-AAPI Artists, Web-Tag-California Artists, Web-Tag-Animals, Web-Tag-Flowers and Plants

Dimensions

Height

80 in

Width

80 in

Location

Category

Display

Category

Temporary

Category

Display

Interpretative Labels

Label Type

Website Medium

Label

Oil on canvas

General Notes

Note Type

Historical Note

Note

Hung Liu finds the subjects for her paintings in the surviving anonymous photographs of China and its people--images taken by foreigners in the early 20th century. Photographs, particularly personal photos, were considered dangerous when the Communist government gained control, and they were targeted for destruction during the ensuing Cultural Revolution. Governmental fear of the past ultimately aimed to quash individual identity, foremost by erasing family bonds and centuries-old traditions. Hung Liu's fascination with recovered photographs is strongly influenced by her own experiences of separation, loss, and immigration. Her paintings address the cataclysmic changes wrought on China by politics and forced modernization. Familial relationships and humble activities such as the shoemaking taking place here are retrieved, as if through veiled remembrance. Old meets new in the juxtaposition of icons of Chinese history--its religious and artistic heritage--with the thin washes of paint that dissolve the family portrayed. While grounded in the Chinese experience, Liu's paintings ultimately offer a universal meditation on the human condition. A two-time recipient of the painting Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts, Liu is a member of the faculty at Mills College in Oakland.