Charles White at David Zwirner Gallery

Charles White called painting his weapon in fighting racism and poverty in the United States.  His painting of a sharecropper from 1947-48 demonstrates the difficulty of that life and the resilience of the farmers.  Part of an exhibition highlighting White’s last mural – a celebration of the achievements of educator and activist Mary McLeod Bethune – the work exhibits White’s commitment to representational art (when abstraction was becoming the new norm) in service of social change.  (On view at David Zwirner Gallery through Feb 16th).

Charles White, Sharecropper, oil on canvas, 30 x 24 inches, 1947-1948.

Hung Liu at Nancy Hoffman Gallery

Awash in light, Hung Liu’s painting of an American sharecropper from near Jackson Mississippi belies the difficulty of this Depression era woman’s life as originally pictured in a photo by Dorothea Lange. Liu lifts her subject from the realm of documentary and considers her – via the same image – from an alternative angle. (At Nancy Hoffman Gallery through Oct 22nd).

Hung Liu, Sharecropper, oil on canvas, 96 x 120 inches, 2016.
Hung Liu, Sharecropper, oil on canvas, 96 x 120 inches, 2016.