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Liu Zheng: Yossi Milo Gallery.


When Swiss emigre Robert Frank set out to document America for his laconic la·con·ic  
adj.
Using or marked by the use of few words; terse or concise. See Synonyms at silent.



[Latin Lac
 if pathos-laden photographic series "The Americans" in 1955, he encountered a society in the grip of postwar consumption, vitiated vi·ti·ate  
tr.v. vi·ti·at·ed, vi·ti·at·ing, vi·ti·ates
1. To reduce the value or impair the quality of.

2. To corrupt morally; debase.

3. To make ineffective; invalidate.
 by racial inequalities and rampant class division. About as subtle as Tocqueville, Frank rendered ideological his documentation of an American odyssey through bus depots and Woolworth stores, presenting the sad reality of the everyday as a parade of typologies and archetypes. Stripped of pretense and drained of affect, his photographs offered the perfect antidote to Family of Man-style optimism. Yet for all his deadpan nihilism--his vision of an America democratic only in name--Frank's title still nags.

Much to his credit, Frank's project clearly informs Liu Zheng's recent series "The Chinese" (1994-2002), without over-whelming it. Forty-six eighteen-inch square gelatin-silver prints of monks, convicts, villagers, actors, opera singers, businessmen, transvestites, and corpses were culled from the series for his first solo show in the US. Liu's self-conscious images of mainland China relate to Frank's (as well as to those of August Sander August Sander (November 17, 1876 – April 20, 1964) was a German photographer.

Sander was the son of a carpenter working in the mining industry. While working at a local mine, Sander first learned about photography by assisting a photographer who was working for the
, Lewis W. Hine, Weegee, and Diane Arbus Diane Arbus (March 14, 1923 – July 26, 1971) was an American photographer, noted for her portraits of people on the fringes of society. Early life
Diane Nemerov
), but they are also decidedly about the present and his privileged position as a native son. Liu's China is achingly modern, a nation wrestling with all the inconsistencies that such a designation implies. As a child of the Cultural Revolution, he witnessed the dispersion of his own ancestral artifacts artifacts

see specimen artifacts.
, which made way for ubiquitous state-sanctioned representations. And as a longtime photojournalist for the widely disseminated Workers' Daily, Liu was trained to read photography as propaganda. When he began "The Chinese," legislated subjects gave way to subjective fascinations: money, sex, death, and salvation.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Many works, such as Rural Peasant, Yanan, Shaanxi Province, 2000, display a mordant mordant (môr`dənt) [Fr.,=biting], substance used in dyeing to fix certain dyes (mordant dyes) in cloth. Either the mordant (if it is colloidal) or a colloid produced by the mordant adheres to the fiber, attracting and fixing the colloidal  humor stripped of irony, as its conspicuous subject steadily meets our gaze with a full, toothy grin; others, like Two Homeless Boys, Beijing, 1998, smack gratingly of rhetoric while still conveying an unembarrassed sympathy. Liu's sitters are participants, perhaps as a result of his medium-format camera that, unlike Frank's more compact Leica, is always noticed in advance of each shot. The resultant understanding runs deep. In images such as Two Miners, Datong, Shanxi Province, 1996, or Xinjiang Girl Working in a Textile Factory, Hetian, Xinjiang Province, 1996, labor is sordidly, hauntingly personified, while in Two Rich Men on New Year's Eve, Beijing, 1999, and A Chinese Girl Chinese Girl is a 1950 painting by Vladimir Tretchikoff. It became one of the world's most popular paintings when made into print in the 1960s and 1970s, and is one of the world's best-selling art prints.  with a Foreign Friend, Beijing, 1996, its effects are likewise sharply drawn. Communism might exist as a nowhere horizon, but capitalism fares little better. In all cases, the details count. In Three Country Strippers Notable strippers of the past
  • Ann Corio
  • Bernie Barker, world's oldest male stripper.[1]
  • Anna Held (Helene Anna Held)
  • Blaze Starr
  • Carol Doda
  • Charmion
  • Chesty Morgan (Born: Ilona Wilczkowska)
, Huoshentai, Henan Province, 2000, ripped bedsheets form makeshift bras and sarongs that merely call attention to the young bodies they hardly cover.

Such is Liu's darkly lapsarian view, which seems at once historically over- and underdetermined. The despondency de·spon·den·cy  
n.
Depression of spirits from loss of hope, confidence, or courage; dejection.

Noun 1. despondency - feeling downcast and disheartened and hopeless
despondence, disconsolateness, heartsickness
 is relieved only by the occasional equanimity e·qua·nim·i·ty  
n.
The quality of being calm and even-tempered; composure.



[Latin aequanimit
 of a monk or priest or a body stilled in death. However, A Girl Killed in a Traffic Accident, Wuban, Hubei Province, 2000, offers its subject as a specimen wholly unredeemed. Even the statue in Buddba in Cage, Wutai Mountain, Shanxi Province, 1998, languishes in a state of disrepair, forlorn on a vacant hillside. Nonetheless, the artist insists that he has no intention of leaving China. He also cautions against reading his work as negative censure, despite the pessimism he equivocally maintains. "For me," he says, "the operative word is 'studying.'"
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Author:Hudson, Suzanne
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Critical Essay
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Oct 1, 2005
Words:563
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