Liu Xiaodong and the Realism That Restores Weight to Everyday Life

Liu Xiaodong and the Realism That Restores Weight to Everyday Life
#Exhibitions
The River Divides, the World Connects | Courtesy Taikang Art Museum

In the suspended quiet of a studio, Liu Xiaodong observes the world with the same attention one gives to a beloved face: nothing is marginal, everything pulses with reality. For over forty years, the Chinese painter has transformed fragments of everyday life - neighborhood streets, childhood friends, anonymous passersby - into images charged with presence, restoring the “small self” to the center of contemporary storytelling. Trained within a rigorous academic system yet always in dialogue with experimental practices, Liu has shaped a language in which painting from life becomes a direct, almost surgical gesture. Being physically in front of his subjects is, for him, a way of entering the rhythm of society: sensing the air, the movements, the emotional nuances that cannot be captured from a distance. Photography, collage, and imagined scene-building expand the narrative density of his works, weaving together observation, memory, and invention. The result is a profoundly human form of Neo-Realism, where reality is not a mere surface but a constellation of feelings, judgments, and tensions. From the places of his youth to cities across the world, Liu constructs a geographical and psychological bridge in which images both document and transcend the present. His paintings remind us that art does not simply replicate the world - it travels alongside it, questions it, and makes it more truthful than it appears.
Viola Canova - © 2025 ARTE.it for Bvlgari Hotel Beijing