The Cleveland Museum of Art
Collection Online as of December 13, 2025

Two Rich Men on New Year's Eve, Beijing
1999
(Chinese, b. 1969)
Paper: 45.7 x 45.7 cm (18 x 18 in.); Matted: 71.1 x 66 cm (28 x 26 in.)
Purchase from the J. H. Wade Fund 2012.107
Courtesy of the artist and Eli Klein Gallery © Liu Zheng
Location: Not on view
Description
Liu Zheng worked for a newspaper in 1991–97, creating images that were supposedly documentary but instead presented a fictional, idealized view of life in China. The burgeoning individual prosperity and increasing openness to the West, meanwhile, was contributing to the rise of the photographer-artist in China, whose work fulfilled personal expressive needs rather than governmental ends. In 1994, Liu took on this new role as he began The Chinese, a seven-year independent project chronicling Chinese society that may have been inspired by German photographer August Sander’s comprehensive catalogue of his country’s people. Like American portraitist Diane Arbus, Liu emphasized dispossessed and marginalized citizens, the type of subjects he had been forbidden to shoot as a photojournalist.- Artist; Michael Mattis and Judith Hochberg; Cleveland Museum of Art
- Refocusing Photography: China at the Millenium. The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH (organizer) (June 8-November 16, 2025).
- {{cite web|title=Two Rich Men on New Year's Eve, Beijing|url=false|author=Liu Zheng|year=1999|access-date=13 December 2025|publisher=Cleveland Museum of Art}}
Source URL:
https://www.clevelandart.org/art/2012.107