Lucy Liu Paints the âEmotional Truthâ of Family Memories
Art & Exhibitions
Lucy Liu Paints the âEmotional Truthâ of Family Memories
At Alisan Fine Arts, new paintings by the actor and artist see her confronting her past through the lens of the present.
At the heart of Lucy Liuâs new show at Alisan Fine Arts in New York is a portrait of a family. Parents pose behind three young children in an idyllic park, the picture of domestic togetherness. Yet, the image resists clarity. The figuresâ faces dissolve into a blur, their outlines waver as though half-remembered or softened by time. Memory, the work suggests, is an unstable thing.
âItâs built in layers, and it changes depending on where youâre standing,â Liu told me over email. âWhen I layer or obscure something, itâs not about hiding itâitâs about acknowledging that we never have full access to the original moment.â
Still, itâs not stopped the painter from attempting to grasp at these moments in works that reflect exactly that inaccessibility. Liuâs latest outing, aptly titled âHard Feelings,â surfaces recent paintings that mine a personal narrative, filtered through the gauze of memory. But unlike the representational Family Portrait (2016)âwhich was first unveiled at a 2023 New York Studio School exhibitionâLiuâs subsequent works are looser, more gestural, with more layers disrupting the surface.
They emerge from processes that mirror the act of remembering, Liu noted. âYou see fragments, traces, something partially revealed,â she explained. âThat feels closer to how memory actually exists.â
Excavating the Past
Liu, of course, is among the most recognizable faces in Hollywood. In 1998, she broke out for her role in the comedy-drama series Ally McBeal, before going on to star in Charlieâs Angels (2000), Kill Bill (2003â04), and beloved crime drama Elementary (2012â19). But throughout, sheâs developed a rigorous visual art practice that ranges across mediums.
Where her first solo exhibition in 1993, at New Yorkâs Cast Iron Gallery, introduced her photographs, subsequent shows spotlit her sculptures (âTotemâ at the Popular Institute in Manchester in 2013) and collages (included in âUnhomed Belongingsâ at the National Museum of Singapore in 2019). In recent years, following her studies at the New York Studio School from 2004 to 2007, her paintings have come to the fore.
âTheyâre very different energies,â Liu said of her approaches to performance and visual art, adding that while the former is more collaborative, the latter is more solitary and exploratory. âThey activate different impulses. One is outward-facing and communicative in a direct way, and the other is more internal, more intuitive. But I think they inform each other in subtle ways.â
A decade ago, following the death of her father, Liu excavated her family photographs to confront and process difficult childhood memories. These imagesâand emotionsâwould become source material for Family Portrait, as well as her âwhat wasâ series, which unpacks the complex, rocky landscape of her own history, identity, and inheritance.
âThose experiences are foundational,â Liu said of that autobiographical thread. âTheyâre not something I step outside ofâtheyâre something Iâm constantly moving through.â
Unresolving the Past
What Was (2023) and What Stays (2023) center on Liuâs mother, shown as a young woman following her immigration to the U.S. Her figure is outlined against layered backdrops of urban and familial surroundings, suggesting shifting contexts and presences.
Liuâs parents also show up in Hourglass (2026), delineated against a graphically rendered building and blurry tints, and in 1965 (2026), where their faces are obscured by a childlike drawing. Theyâre compositions that seem placid on the surface, but with a subtle tension and ambiguity. Her parents in Hourglass are faintly shadowed by her maternal grandparents; in Stones in the Sun (2026), her father is depicted beneath a burst of red and orange forms thatâs at once radiant and explosive.
Itâs not just the passing of time that has refracted Liuâs memories and historyâher own experience of motherhood has colored the generational aspect of her work. Motherhood has âshifted my sense of time and responsibility,â she said. âItâs made me more aware of legacy, good and bad, and of what gets passed down and what gets reinterpreted.â
Painting, for Liu, isnât meant to reconcile her feelings about the past. Rather, itâs âa way to sit with those questions without needing to resolve them,â she said. Sheâs happy for her new works to exist amid discomfort and uncertaintyâfor her memories to âsurface as they are,â without the benefit of rose-colored glasses. Itâs an emotional candor that gives her compositions an unusual force.
âItâs about finding the emotional truth of something without needing to explain it literally,â Liu said. âWhat Iâm more interested in is the feeling that remains after memory has settled. Thatâs what I choose to reveal. The rest can stay unspoken.â
âLucy Liu: Hard Feelingsâ is on view at Alisan Fine Arts, 120 East 65th Street, New York, May 14âJune 6.
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