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Did
you know that Hong Kong was still last night?
8.3.2003
¡V 13.4.2003
(¤¤¤å·s»D½Z)
Art
Walk 2003: 6 pm ¡V 12 am, Fri, 7 Mar, 2003 (open to ticket-holders
only).
Opening Reception: 5 ¡V 7 pm, Sat, 8 Mar, 2003 (free admission).
Gallery
hours: 12 ¡V 7 pm (Wed to Sun) (closed on Mon, Tue & public holidays)
Para/Site Art Space, 2 Po Yan Street (near 224 Hollywood Road),
Sheung Wan, Hong Kong
Did
you know that Hong Kong was still last night?
Did
you hear anything? See anything? Did you feel it, taste it?
Five
artists from London try to discover Hong Kong through their senses.
They will listen to her urban groans, feel her rough concrete and
slick glass facades, be dazzled by the coloured neon lights, and
taste hot, sour, fishy, sweet smells.
For
one intense week they will respond to the culturally diverse city,
and make new works (or adapt existing works) in a site-specific
context, with relation to their new environment and audience.
The
urban metropolis of Hong Kong assaults the senses from the moment
you enter the city. This all engrossing, super-stimulating place
blares garish neon lights, rings of pop music mixed with traffic
drones, the aromas of delicious cooking intoxicates as one slides
along the greasy concrete sidewalks. With the aid of the senses,
one is able to navigate around this urban jungle, in search of individuality,
locality and a sense of 'home'.
The
artists chosen for this exhibition, consciously and unconsciously
comment on many issues surrounding contemporary fast-paced Hong
Kong culture, but coming from outside that context they bring with
them fresh and alternative viewpoints. Their works speak of dislocation,
loss of individuality, pop culture and soul-searching.
Guy
Bar-Amotz uses urban sounds, transforming them into cyber pop Karaoke
experiences. Not just mere transmitters, his sleek sound systems
are sculptures that mix street music with urban noise. These are
custom-made sounds emitting from his ¡¥Lo-Fi¡¦ system. In Hong Kong,
Bar-Amotz will improvise by building a new small-scale stereo sampling
device that will incorporate the very best of Hong Kong¡¦s Growls.
Lisa
Cheung plays with urban lights reminiscent of neon signs, crafty
kitsch lanterns and nostalgic children¡¦s carnivals. The garish colours
dance around the viewers, illuminating spaces that have been forgotten
and neglected. Many of her works involve a level of interaction,
whereby audience participation disperses the authorship of the artwork
into a collective experience.
Anthony
Key¡¦s work deals with issues of location, or rather dislocation,
specifically of the Chinese experience. His humorous sculptures,
made from everyday objects and foods stuff, deals with cultural
displacement, personally and collectively with reference to the
everyday world. The simple materials he chooses are at once poignant
and absurd. Key will attempt to re-interpret HK¡¦s famous skyline.
Yeu
Lai Mo uses foods and food culture to attract and repel. Her video
is a queasy menu of foods that are at one point delectable, now
transformed into an examination of culture and lifestyle. Like Key,
she is also concerned with issues of cultural (dis)placement and
the everyday Diasporic Chinese experience, all the while playing
with our taste buds!
Finally,
Olof Bjornsdottir¡¦s work touches you, quite literally. ¡¥Beneficial
Squeeze¡¦ involves a sensuous repetitive massage action that touches
another in a way that feels at first alien and perhaps even frightening
within an urban setting. However, slowly as one relaxes in the care
of her hands, one is mentally transported to another place. The
tactile nature of her works elicits strong sensuous responses.
For
more information, please contact the Para/Site Art Space:
T: (852) 2517-4620 / e-mail: parasite@netvigator.com
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