NEW YORK, NY.- Alisan Fine Arts New York presents Hard Feelings, a solo exhibition of paintings by Lucy Liu. Centered on works from her ongoing what was series, the exhibition explores the emotional and psychological terrain of memory, with particular attention to family, cultural inheritance, and the shifting nature of personal history.
Lius series began in 2017, following the death of her father. The event prompted her to revisit an archive of family photographs and to confront complex emotions surrounding a sometimes difficult childhood. As she processed these memorieschildhood moments and lived fragmentsshe began using these images as source material for her paintings. The series began with Family Portrait, first shown in her 2023 solo exhibition at the New York Studio School. As curator Kara Carmack described, a family of five stands motionless in a park posing for a camera. The groups classical pyramidal composition connotes closeness and stability. Yet the faces of impasto swirls and the energetic brushstrokes capture the murky, impermanent edges of memory and affect.
While Family Portrait reflects an early approach rooted in representation, it ultimately proves to be an outlier within the series. Liu continues to draw from family photographs, but in subsequent works she begins to cover her initial renderings with contrasting imagery executed in loose, expressive brushstrokes. Any trace of the original image dissolves into sweeping gestures and dense accumulations of paint.
Through this process, Liu foregrounds the instability of memory: rather than fixed, her references undergo continual transformation, layered, disrupted, and partially erased. These canvases function as evolving surfaces, where traces of earlier compositions remain embedded, creating tension between what is visible and what is obscured.
More recent paintings introduce a sharper, more defined visual language. What Was and What Stays draw from archival images of Lius mother following her immigration to the United States. In these works, the outlined figure of her mother anchors the composition, around which Liu stages encounters between presence and absencepartial figures, erased companions, and overlapping spaces that evoke what remains alongside what has disappeared.
This shift reflects a renewed engagement with family history, shaped in part by the artists evolving understanding of motherhood and generational experience. In Hourglass and 1965, both of her parents appear in compositions that are more linear, graphic, and marked by restraint and reduction. In the latter, a faint imprint of her maternal grandparents emerges behind them. Liu attributes this visual language to her process of recollection, in which memories are distilled to their core and her parents are understood as young individuals with ambitions and lives preceding the formation of the family. As Carmack observes, Unlike the earlier body of work, these paintings retain rather than obscure the referents of Lius past, generously and honestly delving into the complexities of her autobiography.
Throughout the exhibition, Liu navigates the space between memory and imagination, allowing autobiographical material to surface. The paintings suggest that memory is not recovered intact, but continuously reconstructedreshaped by time, emotion, and perspective. The title, Hard Feelings, resists a singular interpretation: rather than signaling resolution, it points to the difficulty of feeling itself.
Emotions emerge as uneven, layered, and at times inaccessibleresistant to articulation, yet persistently present. Lius paintings trace this complexity, where feelings cannot always be fully grasped or expressed. The works remain open-ended, holding together conflicting sensations of attachment, distance, forgiveness, and compassion. They invite viewers to reflect on their own relationships to memory and the ways in which the past persists in the present.
The Hard Feelings series is about unmasking and stripping away the instinct to reframe the past or make it more palatable. These paintings let my memories surface as they are: raw, unadorned, and unburdened by cultural or societal pressure to soften or explain. There is no façade, nothing performativejust feeling, laid bare. It has been deeply healing to finally see what I have long kept shrouded, and to find, waiting there, the child I left behind. Lucy Liu, 2026
Hard Feelings will be on view at Alisan Fine Arts New York from May 14 June 6. For press inquiries, images, and further information, please contact:info@alisan.nyc
About the artist
Currently living and working in New York City, Lucy Lius artistic practice spans painting, sculpture, collage, silkscreen, and installation. Her first solo exhibition, Unraveling (1993), was held at Cast Iron Gallery in New York, featuring photography and earning her a grant to study at Beijing Normal University. Liu found this period in China to be extremely valuable, not only as an opportunity to learn more about her Chinese heritage, but also to expand her understanding of the symbolic potential of art. The trip became the subject of her next body of work, which was showcased as a solo exhibition (Catapult) at Los Angeles Purple Gallery in 1997. Liu remained in Los Angeles for several years, during which time she continued to work in collage and photographic portraiture. She returned to New York City in 2004, enrolling in painting classes at the New York Studio School from 2004-2007.
Lius artwork is invariably concerned with notions of security, salvation, and the long-term effects of personal relationships on our physical and emotional selves. She addresses these themes in painting, sculpture, collage, silkscreen, and the appropriation of discarded objects, which Liu recontextualizes in handmade constructions that function as reliquaries.
Her work has been featured in numerous gallery exhibitions and international art fairs, displayed in both private and corporate collections. Her most recent solo exhibitions include what was, New York Studio School, New York, NY (2023), One of These Things Is Not Like the Others, Napa Valley Museum Yountville, Yountville, CA (2020), and Unhomed Belongings, National Museum of Singapore (2019).