Beili Liu
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Beili Liu (artist) | |
|---|---|
| 刘北立 劉北立 | |
| Born | 1974 (age 51–52) Jilin, China |
| Education | University of Michigan, Ann Arbor |
| Known for | Installation, public art, fiber art, performance, drawing |
| Awards | Andrew Carnegie Fellowship; Pollock Prize for Creativity; Fulbright Distinguished Arctic Chair; Joan Mitchell Foundation Painters and Sculptors Grant; National Endowment for the Arts Challenge America Grant; Texas State Artist in 3D Media |
| Website | beililiu |
Beili Liu (Chinese: 刘北立; born 1974) is a Chinese-born US-based visual artist who makes large-scale, process-driven sculptural environments that examine themes of migration, cultural memory, materiality, labor, social and environmental concerns.[1] Through unconventional use of commonplace materials and elements such as thread, needle, scissors, feather, salt, wax, and cement, Liu extrapolates complex cultural narratives through a hybrid work form that merges site-responsive installation, sculpture, public art, and performance.[2] Liu lives and works in Austin, Texas. Liu is the Leslie Waggener Professor in the Fine Arts and is a University of Texas System Regents' Outstanding Teaching Professor[3] at the University of Texas at Austin.[4]
Beili Liu was born in a farming village in the Northeast province of Jilin, China to parents who were among the 16 million sent-down youth during China's Cultural Revolution. After ten years of exile and re-education in the countryside, her parents relocated to the Northeast Chinese industrial city of Shenyang. In 1989, one month before the Tiananmen Square Protests, her family migrated to the southern coastal city of Shenzhen, a major manufacturing center and economic hub bordering Hong Kong and one of four "Special Economic Zones" designated at the early stage of the reform and opening up.
Education
Liu attended Shenzhen University, studying Chinese Literature before immigrating to the US in 1995. Liu received a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of Tennessee, Knoxville in 2001 and a Master of Fine Arts degree from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor in 2003 as a Barbour Scholar.[5]