Hong
Kong artists retrospective II
The Red Twenty Years of Ricky Yeung Sau-churk (いゅ)
Exhibition
period: 2-30 November 2002
Preview: 1 November (Fri) 2002 6pm
Artist
Forum: 10 November 2002 (Sun) 3 pm
Special guest: Oscar Ho
Research/ curator: Anthony Leung
"Yeung・s
works not only display the sensation of exigency and anxiety which
is rare among Hong Kong art, but also reflect manifold meanings
through his employment of sex and violence (...)"
- Oscar Ho,
"The Definition of Abjection and Violence" in :Ying Choi;
column in Hong Kong
Economic
Journal,
4 Oct 1987. (original text in Chinese)
In response
to the insufficiency of the Hong Kong contemporary art scene, Para/Site,
apart from providing young artists opportunities for experimental
projects, starts to introduce a series of retrospective exhibitions
for established local artists this year. The foremost retrospective
research-based exhibition featuring on May Fung was held in last
May and June. The second featured artist in this November will be
Yeung Sau-churk.
Yeung became
well known in the local art scene during the 1980s for his radical
expression. The imagery of sex and death is the hallmark of his
early works, disclosing the distortion of humanity and the dark
side of the human psychic that he experiences in real life. Although
most of his early works are paintings (acrylic on paper) and sculptures
(plaster), the most conspicuous work was his performance installation
Man and Cage, in which he became part of the artwork, by encaging
himself in a bamboo cage for 48 hours. This piece is full of existentialistic
heroism and is one of the local cannons by which the art circle
still relishes today.
The development
of his artist career is quite common in Hong Kong: he became established
before he received any formal art education Due to the unrest and
disturbance in society as well as in his personal life between 1987
and 1989, Yeung resolved courageously to leave everything behind
and tramp over Europe. After returning in 1991, he went to college
again and entered into a new stage for both his life and art. Yeung・s
artworks became more conceptual and objective, rather than being
radical and misanthropic as before. In spite of these changes, he
kept on addressing different political issues in Hong Kong. His
installation .The Genealogy of Star and Sound・ in the .Art &
Space: From Sculpture to Installation・ exhibition at the University
of Science and Technology in 1993 was an example in this period.
After graduation, Yeung devoted himself to art education and has
worked as a secondary school teacher until the present. Besides
teaching, he is involved in many community art projects for the
minorities in order to make changes in a more direct and personal
fashion.
In addition
to the new commission works, this exhibit will display other original
works, sketches and precious documentations by Yeung from the past
(some of them have never been publicly shown). Para/Site will publish
a catalogue to accompany the exhibition.
Enquiries: 2517-4620
or parasite@netvigator.com
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