Last September Hung Liu returned to Paulson Bott Press for her fifth project. All of us at the press look forward to her enthusiasm and her wide-ranging humor. The first time I worked with Hung Liu in 2008, I expected her to be stoic and severe, given the heavy content of her work. However, I was surprised and pleased to discover that despite her seriousness, she carries herself with an almost child-like cheerfulness and curiosity. There is a good deal of laughter when Hung is in the studio. She also brings a considerable amount of technical knowledge and confidence to the production of her prints. Intaglio can be a daunting and opaque medium for many artists, but she never seems intimidated by its esoteric challenges and unpredictability. For this project we focused on two large portraits and three small cartoon images based on her Happy & Gay series of paintings.
Hung Liu: Happy and Gay (Thanks Mom, Kite, Flag), 2012 |
Printer Sam Carr-Prindle and Hung Liu in the studio |
Hung Liu, Shui-Water and Shan-Mountain, 2012 |
The
two portraits are part of an ongoing series of works that are based on early 20th-century
photographs of prostitutes. Many of the photographs are small and lack clarity
and contrast, yet she is able to enhance the amount of information while imbuing
them with a greater sense of life and naturalism. In addition to bringing her
large collection of portraits, Hung also brought in an enviable collection of
books filled with small reproductions of Chinese woodcuts, which she used to
create the backgrounds of Shan-Mountain
and Shui-Water. Both prints started
with a softground drawing of the figure that was then built up with many layers
of aquatint, drypoint, reductive plate work, and, most notably, spitbite, in
which nitric acid is painted onto the plate and allowed to drip and run,
echoing the turpentine streaks of her paintings. Similar to the way Hung mixes
humor and seriousness, these images balance crude or visceral elements with
elegance. The softground has a rough, heavy and weathered quality in the way
the lines and shapes are broken up by optical chatter, yet the draftsmanship is
masterful and sensitive. The spitbite drips can feel both chaotic and ominous,
as if the women were melting wax figures yet the drips in and of themselves are
lyrical and painted with an unfussy playfulness. These contrasting elements
lend a fitting uneasiness to their beauty. While the women are poised and
graceful, the images belie the grim and misogynistic reality of their original
purpose.
Hung Liu’s work is never what you think it might be at first glance.
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