Born in Beijing, China in 1965, Liu Wei studied printmaking at Beijing’s Central Academy of Fine Arts. After graduating, Liu Wei quickly became known as a prominent figure in China’s “cynical realism” movement. Influenced by the events of 1989, his early paintings mirror the movement’s disenchantment with both political and artistic utopias, less a statement about historic events, than expressions of skepticism and satire.
Demonstrating a wide array of influences—from Chinese calligraphy to Expressionism—Liu Wei’s work has become less political over time, dealing instead with universal themes of humanity. Like his Western forebears Francis Bacon and Lucien Freud, he is a master of rendering human flesh and combining figuration with subliminal text and abstraction. Liu Wei’s deft grasp of technique and acutecynical realism awareness of color and composition is evident in his lush landscapes, in which flora and fauna often escape the confines of the canvas and spill out onto the hand carved frames.
Liu Wei currently lives in Beijing. His work has been exhibited in prestigious organizations worldwide including the Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney, Australia; the Kunsthal, Rotterdam, the Netherlands; Museum of Modern Art, Oxford, UK; the Vancouver Art Gallery, Canada; the Hong Kong Arts Centre, Hong Kong, China; the Singapore Art Museum, Singapore; Asia Society, New York; MoMA P.S.1, New York; the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, California; the Shanghai Gallery of Art, China; the Guangdong Art Museum in Guangzhou, China; the Kuandu Museum of Fine Arts in Taipei; and the Beijing Art Museum, China. Liu Wei has also been featured in the 45th and the 46th Venice Biennales, the 22nd International Biennale of Sao Paulo, Brazil, and the 1st Guangzhou Triennial.