top of page

LIU SHIMING ART PRESERVATION

To present Liu Shiming's sculptural art in the form of traveling exhibitions and discussion panels to explore the stories and values behind Liu Shiming's art and facilitate discourse around the arts and culture with curators, researchers,

and critics worldwide.

Exhibitions & Panels

4B6A4738.jpg

We had an incredible discussion focused on the importance of community development and its role in contemporary art. Thank you to our special guest Wei Liu, son of Liu Shiming;  our brilliant panelists, Linda Lees, Founder of Creative Cities; Tadeusz Sudol,President of Gallery RIVAA; and curator, Fran Kaufman.

 

“Sculpting the Chinese Spirit: Vitality in Stillness”

Gallery RIVAA, New York

 

2022 

DSC_2650.jpg
DSC_3372.jpg
WTC Oculus Exhibition _Chinese Original_ P10_edited.jpg
_R3_7716.JPG

“LIU SHIMING: A CHINESE ORIGINAL”

The Oculus, WTC, New York

2020

The 57 sculptures here cover Liu’s full career of

more than half a century.

WTC Oculus Exhibition _Chinese Original_ P05.jpg

“Kindness Expresses Truth and Love”

Washington, D.C. 

2019

DC Exhibition _Kindness Expresses_Truth and Love_ P05.jpg
DC Exhibition _Kindness Expresses_Truth and Love_ P20.jpg
DSC_1298 2.JPG
DSC_6817.JPG
_7R23334_edited.jpg

“Liu Shiming's Sculpture: Symposium

Columbia University, New York

2019

DSC_6833.JPG
DSC_5128.jpg

“Departure and Return”

New York

2019

DSC_5714.JPG
DSC_4954.jpg

Critics and curators' comments

“What’s perhaps most interesting about Liu was his conscious decision to cultivate Chinese traditional aesthetics in new ways, rather than adopting Western styles that were very much in vogue at the time.”       

 

--Artnet (An online platform that connects galleries and collectors from around the world)

“Throughout his six decades of telling stories in his sculpture, Shiming’s personal faith in art was unwavering. The sculptures seem timeless, some even universal, channeling his deep passion and compassion through the lenses of his acceptance of life’s strange journey, his love for humanity and his own cultural heritage. We see a profound understanding of the weight of thousands of years of convention fused with his own view of the world, a view that celebrates and embraces the dignity and resilience of unacknowledged and anonymous lives, lives challenged by the economic and political upheavals and transformations of a modernizing society. ”

 

--Fran Kaufman(Curator, a partner in Kaufman Vardy Projects)

“Someone Who Wants to Fly” (1982) portrays a man stretching his arms, which are adorned with fake wings. Despite bricks carved into the base, his legs and feet once again are not fully molded. Is this dreamer still standing on solid ground, or actually taking flight? For an artist rendered immobile throughout much of his life, Liu’s centerpiece — presented at the gallery entrance — speaks to his ability to traverse the world through his art.”

           

--Billy Anania (Editor, critic, and journalist)  

“Liu’s works are both unsentimental and universal. By merging folk techniques with modernist ideas about the human form, he created a completely new genre. This unique perspective brings a freshness and a lively dialogue to what sculpture can ultimately be.” 

--Maria Cristina Pio (Co-Director; Director of Education and Administration, Godwin-Ternbach Museum)

--Louise Weinberg (Co-Director; Director of Exhibitions/Collections and Curator,Godwin-Ternbach Museum)

“Despite his recent success, Liu Shiming never lost his interest or devotion to traditional folk art. Rather than sculpture that aspired to attract followers of western modernism, Liu’s primary audience came from everyday working class people living in rural areas. “

 

--Robert C. Morgan Ph.D.

( Professor Emeritus in Art  History at the Rochester Institute of Technology)

Asset 1.png

Attendees' comments

"With much gratitude to the Liu Shiming Art Foundation, we on Roosevelt Island have been give the great opportunity to reflect upon humanity in its simplest form. The universal messages of transcendence, survival, a purse to reflection on our current norms, and the emotions of human livelihood are infused into stagnant energies of the sculpted bronze."

"Truly a wonderful exhibition. The way I can relate and connect to so many pieces fills me with joy. Art that can connect with you is the realest art. I enjoyed every piece at the gallery."

"I was struck by the different perspectives on subjects and loved the innovative mixture of representational and freedom talking in the Jigong Drinking piece. Man with boat and Cormorants felt hauling. I also just learned about the sheepskin raft. Love the show, it was a really different experience for me."

"Themes for showing all the sculptures work for Roosevelt Island residents. I really enjoyed the exhibition and please do it more. The worshop is amazing and I know a lot more than before about all those sculpture works! sculture works!"

"The idea of love and caring is also an important message in the ethos of NYC and it is an integral part of the city's habitat. The artist reflected these feelings in many pieces such as the already mentioned “Mother and Child” and the "Eji and the Orphans". We the audience are captured by these emotions and brought and have a little respite from the cold life of a big never sleeping city."

"Thank you for sharing works of Liu to us. I thoroughly enjoyed his sculptures and his ability to capture human expressions in the faces of his subjects. The determination of Liu tiehua: the

self-reflection of Self Portrait(1989): the struggle of Cutting through Mountains; and the joy in the faces of children."

bottom of page