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Pixy Liao: “My work is not about equality - it’s about fantasy”

GAVIN MARCUS RADII 2021-01-20


Photographer Pixy Liao has a fraught relationship with relationships.

“I accept the fact that the world surrounding me will never completely accept me,” she candidly tells us. “For me, it’s more important to create a world for myself than to think about what other voices say.” It is this attitude that allows the Shanghai-born photographer to challenge the expectations enforced upon her.

Misrepresenting Misrepresentation

The creation of this world began 13 years ago, when Liao met her partner and art collaborator, Moro, while studying photography at the University of Memphis. What started as a way to get to know each other turned into a poignant portrait series that playfully re-imagines traditional gender norms. Set against the backdrop of her own relationship, Liao’s series, Experimental Relationship, flips the power dynamic on its head portraying the couple in reversed roles.


The images, which portray Liao as a dominant, almost authoritative force over the subservient and docile Moro, serve as a direct contrast to the traditional view of relationships that Pixy grew up around. “As a woman brought up in China, I used to think I could only love someone who is older and more mature than me,” Liao writes on her website about the problematic cultural expectations that came with dating a man five years her junior.

Thought-provoking yet refined, the portraits show a range of often-intimate scenes, such as a fully-clothed Liao cradling her naked lover, to more provocative images where Liao is subtly biting and choking Moro, or eating a vagina-shaped papaya off his crotch at the breakfast table. “I have always doubted the stereotype of a man-woman relationship,” Liao writes in the foreword to a book accompanying the Experimental Relationship portrait series. “Why does man have to be a certain way? Why should woman be a certain way?”


Laced throughout Liao’s body of work is her distinctive brand of humor. By simply reversing gender roles, her photography exhibits a poker-faced satire that shines a ridiculing light on the gaping cracks of convention. “I take humor very seriously,” Liao avows: “It reveals one’s true self. I think people will get my work when they are amused by it.” The accessibility of everyday scenes and Liao’s humor invite the audience to imagine a world that subverts the narrative of the gender-normative.

By reversing gender roles, Liao’s photography exhibits a poker-faced satire that shines a ridiculing light on the gaping cracks of convention

This subversion of traditional power dynamics is repeatedly emphasized in her other artwork, most notably Soft-Heeled Shoes. Liao’s art piece, a pair of shoes, uses a latex heel cast from her partner’s erect penis. The result is a visual metaphor that antagonizes the patriarchal power dynamics in society. When asked to elaborate, Liao recalls that she “couldn’t put all my weight on [the shoes]. If I did, they would break, which shows that you can’t rely on a man that much. [Women need to] depend on ourselves.“


Opposing Forces


Another powerful theme that runs through Liao’s work is the omnipresence of opposing forces, and the dialogue between them. Love and hate are the most pervasive — a theme perhaps influenced by the “usually tense, sometimes hostile” relationship between Pixy and Moro’s home countries, China and Japan. In one photo titled “Intimacy will improve your relationship,” a loving embrace disguises feelings of anguish. Another shot, named “Spit,” shows Liao tenderly looking at Moro while spitting directly into his mouth. Liao’s work not only exposes the delicate demarcation between love and hate, but also asserts that one is often a byproduct of the other. “A relationship is built by two lovers, but also two rivals,” Liao states. “The hatred comes out of love because love is only ideal in our own imagination. “

“A relationship is built by two lovers, but also two rivals” — Pixy Liao


Control and subservience is another dichotomy prevalent in Pixy’s work. The presence of the cable release — the button that allows Liao and Moro to remotely take the picture — in almost all of Liao’s photographs represents the contradiction of power. “In a relationship there is always a power struggle,” she says. The cable’s recurring presence transcends its status as merely a functional object. Although Pixy assumes the position of authority, the power to take the shot is mostly in the hand of Moro. Liao comments on this paradoxical relationship as “a sign of power,” noting that “it also gives Moro some degree of control in the photo… He takes a cue from me to click the shutter.” The enigma of opposing forces in Experimental Relationship challenges the audience go beyond Liao and Moro, to question the power dynamics in their own relationships.


Influences


What is most enjoyable about Liao’s work is its autobiographical nature. Her time living in Memphis, Tennessee has added an appreciation for vibrant, yet delicately-matched color palettes, accompanied by an acute attention to detail nurtured from her graphic design background.

All of this is blended together by the cross-cultural influences that come to her by nature of being a Chinese immigrant living in the USA, dating a Japanese man.


However, Liao’s current biggest influence is the future, and who she wants to become. “What I desire to be as a person is what I make,” she says. The more Liao grows as an artist, the more she wants to move away from her relationship and branch off into work that represents her and other women’s lived experience. An example of this is the inspiration behind art piece “Breast Spray,” which originated from a news story of a German woman who robbed a store by spraying breast milk into the cashier’s eyes.

This shifting attitude is the impetus behind Liao’s latest work, Temple for Her. The art installation is a tribute to China’s only Empress, Wu Zetian. Although she is considered one of China’s most malicious historical figures, Liao’s aim is not to give agency to oppressive autocrats, but rather to challenge patriarchal misrepresentations of women throughout history. “The work is more about female desire and ambition,” Liao states.



It’s easy to interpret Pixy’s body of work as a feminist statement. But for the artist, it’s not as black and white as that. “My work is not about equality — it’s about my fantasy,” she said at a recent talk. Her challenge to traditional societal expectations doesn’t come in the form of an abrasive middle finger; it comes through creating a world where these expectations don’t exist.

RADII caught up with Pixy Liao during her recent tour of China to talk about her work, cultural differences, and her inspirations:


RADII: Your journey with photography started with a leap of faith as you moved to a country you’d never been to before. Can you share with us how you first got into photography?

Pixy Liao: I was a graphic designer in China. At that time, I was frustrated with my job because my work was always being changed by clients. I wanted to do something where people could not change my creative work. When I watched the movie Blow-Up, I was fascinated by the photographer’s lifestyle in the film, and thought maybe this is the perfect job. No one can change the photo once it’s taken. So I decided to go abroad to study photography. When I was a graphic designer, I was a keen collector of images. I looked at so many images online, photos and paintings. I also paid a lot of attention to color combinations — that was a habit I developed as a designer.

Can you tell us about Experimental Relationship and how it came about? What are some of the central themes or concepts you wanted to explore with this photo series?

This project started from 2007, one year after [Moro and I] had been together. In the beginning, I did it because I noticed that our relationship was viewed as somewhat abnormal by others. I wanted to explain how natural and how fun it is for us to be like this in our relationship. I wanted to test people’s acceptance of a different type of heterosexual relationship. Also, I wanted to test what is the limit of our real relationship.


You mentioned previously that you have always doubted the stereotype of a man-woman relationship. How does this series challenge the stereotypes of the man-woman relationship?

When I started this relationship, I noticed that because I was much more experienced in life than he was at that time, I became the one with the authority. It is a very different type of relationship than what I experienced or knew before. In China, a woman will usually have a relationship with an older, more experienced man. The photos are my notes on what a relationship look like if we do something different — not necessarily just a woman leading a man, but more like collaborating in different ways other than man-leading-woman.

How much of the narrative of your work is your take on the female gaze? What is your definition of the female gaze?

I don’t know what “female gaze” is. It’s a female gaze because I’m female. Because I grew up and live as a woman in this world. It must be a completely different feeling than living as a man in this world. So it’s not a male gaze.

Much of your art lampoons the voyeurism and fetishism that the male gaze traditionally uses to objectify women and empower men. Yet, your work also is so much more than simply turning the power tables on gender. How important do you think it is for the female gaze to be more than simply a reversal of the male gaze and to concentrate on other themes?

Since I cannot experience male gaze, it’s hard for me to reverse that. Women not being “women” does not mean being men. There is so much space in between. What about people who don’t feel like they’re either a man or a woman, or who feel like both a man and a woman? I believe gender is a spectrum, it’s not just two genders. I’m somewhere in between.


A lot of your work carries a distinctive, satirical sense of humor. Is this part of your personality that naturally came out, or was it a conscious creative decision?

That mainly comes from my personality. It’s also a key element I need in order to make work, I need to humor myself. I need to feel the fun of making it. I take humor very seriously. It reveals one’s true self. I think people will get my work when they are amused by it.

To read the full interview and see lots more of Liao's work, hit "Read more" at the bottom of this message.

All photos courtesy Pixy Liao. Follow Pixy on Instagram (@bloodypixy) or her personal website: www.pixyliao.com

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