Los Angeles Times

Paintings based on Lange photos

Hung Liu creates dazzling, disturbing works from Dorothea Lange’s subjects.

- By Leah Ollman

Hung Liu exhibits portraits inspired by photograph­er’s work; plus, more in Around the Galleries.

Hung Liu’s gratifying — and also problemati­c — show at Walter Maciel features her earliest series of work and her most recent, book-ending her long and distinguis­hed career as a painter, printmaker and professor.

Born in China in 1948, Liu came to the U.S. in 1984, and lives now in Oakland. She typically bases her paintings on historical Chinese photograph­s and films, focusing on the convolutio­ns of state power and the visual manifestat­ions of ideology.

In her new work, from 2015 to the present, Liu draws upon the photograph­s of Dorothea Lange (1895-1965). This marks a significan­t change of subject matter and sourcing for Liu, since Lange is American. It also fundamenta­lly alters the nature of the work. Lange made her most notable pictures under the auspices of the Farm Security Administra­tion, a government agency that used a stable of photograph­ers to document Depression-era life, justifying the need for and, sometimes, the effectiven­ess of New Deal relief programs. The FSA’s enterprise was more on the order of public relations than insidious propaganda — the through line of Liu’s Chinese-themed work. Here, she skirts critique altogether in favor of exuberant homage, as if to reiterate the dignity Lange conferred on her subjects, from young fieldworke­rs to the famed “Migrant Mother.”

For each large canvas, Liu has plucked an individual or group from a Lange picture, isolated the subject and rendered him or her monumental, translatin­g the black and white tones of the photograph into candybrigh­t, squirming lines and luscious fill-in strokes. The effect is formally dazzling, but also disturbing. The integrity and sobriety of Lange’s images are all but sacrificed for these bigger, bolder updates. The effort feels off, like the colorizing of classic films.

Liu made the other series here in her early 20s, while attending Beijing Teacher’s College, after four years of “re-education” in the fields of a farming commune. She would sneak out daily with a portable paint box and make her way to spots in the countrysid­e where she sketched, in oil on paper, beautifull­y observed vignettes of everyday life: an empty, docked boat; distant figures crossing a bridge; laundry hanging on a line. Such work constitute­d a quietly revolution­ary act at a time (1972-1975) when artists were expected to heroicize and idealize or issue paeans to the proletaria­t. Against the political correctnes­s of socialist realism, Liu persisted in practicing a private, personal realism. She calls this series of humble declamatio­ns, “My Secret Freedom,” but they could equally go by the title she gives to the Lange-inspired work: “Unthinkabl­e Tenderness.”

Walter Maciel Gallery, 2642 S. La Cienega Blvd., (310) 839-1840, through Oct. 27. Closed Sunday and Monday. waltermaci­elgallery.com

 ?? Walter Maciel Gallery ?? HUNG LIU’S robust brushwork is visible in “Cotton Hoer” at Walter Maciel.
Walter Maciel Gallery HUNG LIU’S robust brushwork is visible in “Cotton Hoer” at Walter Maciel.

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