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Hung Liu: Happy and Gay
de la Cruz, January 17 - April 13, 2025

Hung Liu: Happy and Gay

Past exhibition
  • Overview
  • Installation Views
  • Works
  • Publications
  • Programs
  • Press
  • About the Artist
Overview
Hung Liu, Street Library, 2013. Oil on canvas, wood shelf, and Chinese picture story books. 60 x 88 inches. Photo credit: John Janca.
Hung Liu, Street Library, 2013. Oil on canvas, wood shelf, and Chinese picture story books. 60 x 88 inches. Photo credit: John Janca.
Hung Liu: Happy and Gay, curated by Georgetown University Art and Curatorial Studies graduate students in collaboration with Dr. Dorothy Moss, presents a selection of Liu’s works from 2011-2013.

Hung Liu: Happy and Gay, curated by Georgetown University Art and Curatorial Studies graduate students in collaboration with Dr. Dorothy Moss, presents a selection of Liu’s works from 2011-2013. In the series, Liu revisits cartoons of her youth that were published in children’s books and primers (known as xiaorenshu). Like the Dick and Jane readers circulating in the United States during the postwar era, the illustrations were used in China to socialize children by instilling values such as hard work, family unity, and patriotism. Liu’s reformulation of this palm-size historic childhood imagery into large-scale, richly-painted contemporary canvases not only turns mass-produced illustrations into paintings but also raises questions at the intersection of ideology, propaganda, and education. Liu invites viewers to think critically about the words and images that shape our collective identities, challenging us to reimagine them, a form of rewriting history. As she often said, “history is a verb. It is constantly flowing forward.”

 

This exhibition is generously supported by Maria & Alberto de la Cruz.

Curated by Brett Everette Adams, Cindy Chen, Hannah Cunningham, Clare Daly, Catie Higgins, Amanda Jones, Rosa Manuel, Ali Mills, Sara Miller, Maia Perry, Sambhavi Sinha, Morgan Stevenson-Swadling, and Kaitlyn Wood.

 
Installation Views
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Photographs by Vivian Marie Doering
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Photographs by Vivian Marie Doering
Works
  • Hung Liu Happy and Gay - Star Family, 2012 Oil on canvas with metal stars 60 x 72 x 2 inches (152.4 x 182.9 x 5.1 cm.)
    Hung Liu
    Happy and Gay - Star Family, 2012
    Oil on canvas with metal stars
    60 x 72 x 2 inches (152.4 x 182.9 x 5.1 cm.)
  • Hung Liu Happy and Gay: Boy with Kite, 2012 Oil on canvas with broom and metal star 60 x 48 x 2 inches (152.4 x 121.9 x 5.1 cm.)
    Hung Liu
    Happy and Gay: Boy with Kite, 2012
    Oil on canvas with broom and metal star
    60 x 48 x 2 inches (152.4 x 121.9 x 5.1 cm.)
  • Hung Liu Happy and Gay: Father, 2012 Oil on canvas 60 x 48 x 2 inches
    Hung Liu
    Happy and Gay: Father, 2012
    Oil on canvas
    60 x 48 x 2 inches
  • Hung Liu Happy and Gay: Flag , 2012 Color aquatint etching 24 x 20 inches Ed. 4/20
    Hung Liu
    Happy and Gay: Flag , 2012
    Color aquatint etching
    24 x 20 inches
    Ed. 4/20
  • Hung Liu Happy and Gay: Kite, 2012 Color aquatint etching 24 x 20 inches Ed. 4/20
    Hung Liu
    Happy and Gay: Kite, 2012
    Color aquatint etching
    24 x 20 inches
    Ed. 4/20
  • Hung Liu Happy and Gay: Thanks Mama, 2012 Color aquatint etching 24 x 20 inches Ed. 4/20
    Hung Liu
    Happy and Gay: Thanks Mama, 2012
    Color aquatint etching
    24 x 20 inches
    Ed. 4/20
  • Hung Liu Mother, 2012 Oil on canvas 60 x 48 x 2 inches
    Hung Liu
    Mother, 2012
    Oil on canvas
    60 x 48 x 2 inches
  • Hung Liu Red Flag Flowing, 2007 Oil on canvas 60 x 72 x 2 inches
    Hung Liu
    Red Flag Flowing, 2007
    Oil on canvas
    60 x 72 x 2 inches
  • Hung Liu Sorghum Field, 2012 Oil on canvas with broom and metal star 66 x 77 inches
    Hung Liu
    Sorghum Field, 2012
    Oil on canvas with broom and metal star
    66 x 77 inches
  • Hung Liu Street Library, 2013 oil on canvas, wood shelf, and Chinese picture story books 60 x 88 inches
    Hung Liu
    Street Library, 2013
    oil on canvas, wood shelf, and Chinese picture story books
    60 x 88 inches
  • Hung Liu The Heroines, 2012 Oil on canvas 96 x 160 inches
    Hung Liu
    The Heroines, 2012
    Oil on canvas
    96 x 160 inches
  • Hung Liu The Lifter, 2012 Woodcut with acrylic 33 x 45 inches Ed. 5/25
    Hung Liu
    The Lifter, 2012
    Woodcut with acrylic
    33 x 45 inches
    Ed. 5/25
  • Hung Liu The Reader, 2012 Woodcut with acrylic 33 x 45 inches Ed. 5/25
    Hung Liu
    The Reader, 2012
    Woodcut with acrylic
    33 x 45 inches
    Ed. 5/25
Publications
  • Hung Liu: Happy and Gay

    Hung Liu: Happy and Gay

    Ying Chen-Peng, Jeff Kelley, Dorothy Moss with Georgetown University Graduate Students, edited by Jeff Kelley and Nick Stone, 2025
    Paperback
    Publisher: Hung Liu Estate
    Read more
Programs
  • Let’s sing, Let’s dance

    Let’s sing, Let’s dance

    A Performance by Sheldon Scott April 9, 2025
    Wednesday, April 9 | 5:30 - 7:30 PM Join Georgetown University Art Galleries for a special meditative performance by renowned artist Sheldon Scott (b. 1976,...
    Read more
  • A Conversation on Hung Liu: Happy and Gay & Exhibition Catalogue Launch

    A Conversation on Hung Liu: Happy and Gay & Exhibition Catalogue Launch

    Featuring panelists Dr. Mia Yinxing Liu, Dr. Ying-chen Peng, and Jeff Kelley March 18, 2025
    Moderated by Dr. Dorothy Moss Tuesday, March 18 | 6:00 - 8:00 PM Join Georgetown University Art Galleries for a panel discussion on Hung Liu:...
    Read more
  • Spring 2025 Exhibitions Opening Reception

    Spring 2025 Exhibitions Opening Reception

    January 17, 2025
    Join Georgetown University Art Galleries on Friday, January 17th from 6-8 pm for an Opening Reception to celebrate our Spring 2025 exhibitions: Hung Liu: Happy...
    Read more
Press
  • Hung Liu, “Street Library,” 2013. Oil on canvas, wood shelf and Chinese picture story books. (John Janca)

    A master of ‘weeping realism’ made heroes of workers and migrants

    Blending socialist realism with pop art, Hung Liu made paintings that interrogate the myths of immigration and Mao’s Cultural Revolution.
    Mark Jenkins, The Washington Post, February 26, 2025
  • Hung Liu, Street Library, 2013. Oil on canvas, wood shelf, and Chinese picture story books. 60 x 88 inches. Photo credit: Vivian Marie Doering.

    Hung Liu: Happy and Gay

    ArtforumEDU, February 12, 2025
  • Photo by Sabrina Shaffer

    At Georgetown’s galleries, student curators uncover the stories of alumni and an understudied artist

    Sophie St Amand, The Georgetown Voice, February 10, 2025
  • Two new student-curated exhibitions featuring paintings exploring communist China and photographs from university archives launched in the Georgetown University Art Galleries in the Edmund A. Walsh building Jan. 17, which aims to examine how art reflects both contemporary issues and Georgetown’s values. (Courtesy of Hung Liu Estate)

    GU Art Galleries Open Chinese Painting, GU Photography Exhibitions

    Ajani Stella, The Hoya, January 24, 2025
About the Artist

Born in Changchun, China in 1948, Hung Liu experienced war, famine, and political turmoil before emigrating to the United States in 1984. Coming of age during the era of Mao Zedong, Liu was sent to the countryside, where she lived and worked on a communal farm for four years for “proletarian re-education” during the Cultural Revolution (1966-76). Trained as an artist in the official Socialist Realist style, Liu was accepted to graduate school in the Visual Arts Department of the University of California, San Diego, but was denied a passport by the Chinese government for four years. At UCSD, she studied with influential feminist art historian Moira Roth as well as with conceptual artist Allan Kaprow, who invented “Happenings,” live performances that combined elements of painting, music, dance, poetry, and theater. At the time of her death in 2021 she was Professor Emerita at Mills College, where she taught for twenty-four years.

 

Known for paintings based on historical Chinese and American Dust Bowl-era photographs, Liu portrayed refugees, street performers, laborers, soldiers, prisoners and displaced women and children. As a painter, she challenged the authority of archival photographs by cropping the original compositions, enlarging them from handheld objects to monumental canvases, and imbuing the images with color and texture.

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CONTACT US

 

Email: guartgalleries@georgetown.edu

Telephone: (202)-687-8039

 

HOURS OF OPERATION

 

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