Los Angeles Times

Lasting forms for modern life’s castoffs

- By Leah Ollman

An Te Liu has used all sorts of consumer products — T-shirts, air purifiers, kitchen sponges — as source material in the past. For his pensive show at Anat Ebgi gallery, bronze pieces are mostly cast from the plastic foam packaging materials designed to cushion electronic­s and other goods. Their curves and hollows, industrial­ly produced to perform a particular function, read here as pure mass and void, shaped by the hand.

“Transmissi­on,” as the show is titled, prompts a stimulatin­g meditation on objecthood and time, on the aesthetic legacy the Toronto artist has inherited as well as the problemati­c material legacy that our consumeris­t culture leaves for the next generation. For his part, Liu has given some castoffs an afterlife and a perceptual promotion — from invisibili­ty to grace.

“The Party’s Over,” suspended from the ceiling here, started as a broken disco ball and now hangs as both bronzed artifact and emblem of a damaged planet. Elsewhere, the sculptures’ origins are not always evident, though their surfaces often retain the packaging material’s tell-tale dotted pattern.

There are 18 sculptures here, but in another sense, there is only one. The gallery has been rendered a single immersive sculpture, its proportion­s and materials adroitly calculated to deliver a unified, time- and distancewa­rping effect. We step into an abbreviati­on of the modern museum, a pristine display of what resembles mid-20th-century abstractio­n.

A low, white platform runs the length of the gallery, a raised stage upon which Liu’s bronzes present themselves frontally — unusual for a sculpture show, contributi­ng to the formality of the installati­on. One with a burnished silver patina recalls a twisted torso or an enlarged nub of bone. Another, standing tall as a human, echoes Brancusi’s “Endless Column” in its stack of repeated, rotated modules. A smaller piece nearby, with a stone-gray patina, riffs on the intimacy of abutted, mirrored forms in Brancusi’s “Kiss.”

The installati­on, elegant both visually and conceptual­ly, sets Liu’s work slightly apart from our physical space, the better to consider it as idea. Though endowed with the aura of art historical touchstone­s or even older relics, Liu’s forms are inescapabl­y of the present.

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 ?? Michael Underwood Anat Ebgi ?? INSTALLATI­ON DETAIL of Liu’s exhibition “Transmissi­on” at Anat Ebgi. It has 18 sculptures.
Michael Underwood Anat Ebgi INSTALLATI­ON DETAIL of Liu’s exhibition “Transmissi­on” at Anat Ebgi. It has 18 sculptures.
 ?? Anat Ebgi ?? AN TE LIU’S “Sentinel (III)” is part of “Transmissi­on,” which has works based on packaging materials.
Anat Ebgi AN TE LIU’S “Sentinel (III)” is part of “Transmissi­on,” which has works based on packaging materials.

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