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Mapping
Identities: The Art and Curating of Oscar Ho
Exhibition Opening: Friday 5 November 2004,
6-8pm
Exhibition Period: 6 November to 5 December 2004
Time: 12 - 7pm, Wed to Sun (Closed on Mon, Tue & public
holidays)
Venue: Para/Site Art Space: G/F 4 Po Yan Street, Sheung Wan.
Hong Kong.
Curators: Eliza Lai, Irene Ngan
(¤¤¤å·s»D½Z)
"Curating
an exhibition is like an artistic creation process. The curator
responds to the environments around him, views from a subjective
angle and analyzes objectively. He then presents a whole bunch
of things. These things should not serve only to deal with
a kind of pure artistic feeling. Rather, it must cope with
the developments of society, and reflect cultural phenomenon
according to the cultural theme revealed by the artistic object."
- Oscar Ho. (Ming Pao Daily, 17.1.2001)
Following on from 'QK- The Curious Object - Chan Yuk Keung',
Para/Site Art Space has invited Oscar Ho to be the fourth
artist of its Hong Kong artists retrospective series. Oscar
Ho makes it clear that he does not wish to have any retrospective
show because he thinks that his work has not yet come to a
conclusive stage. Instead, this exhibition will focus on exploring
his dual identities as a curator and artist, with an attempt
to look at some aspects of his creative worlds.
Oscar
Ho is a curator, artist, art critic and art educator. He was
once a Hong Kong art policy researcher. In the late 70's,
he studied and lived in North America for nearly 10 years.
He was first trained as a painter then turned to create sculptural
works. During his university days, he was deeply influenced
by his professors who introduced him to look at art and culture
from the Marxist and anthropological approaches. And what
Oscar Ho found most rewarding was to study with a group of
'Californian Funk' artists and classmates, from whom he learned
that the most important aspect of art making is to integrate
art into one's life. Oscar Ho gave up using mud and branches
after his return to Hong Kong. He turned to use plastic and
industrial materials in response to the local urban landscape.
Although Oscar Ho sometimes added in political elements into
his work, most of these sculptural constructions remained
personal. Since 1991 Oscar Ho has created his Stories Around
Town series which is far his most important work. He combines
local news, fabricated stories and mythology to suggest a
city being filled with collective hysteria.

Oscar
Ho started to take up the post as Exhibition Director of Hong
Kong Arts Centre in 1988 and continued to work there for more
than 10 years. He found himself very lucky to be the curator
of an independent institution, as Hong Kong Arts Centre was
probably the only non-government institution that employed
a full time curator in contemporary art. During that period,
he organised about 100 exhibitions, including those highly
controversial open exhibitions Living with Art and In Search
of Art. Through these exhibitions, Oscar Ho opened up
the definitions of art. He looked at art sociologically as
cultural products created by all members of the community.
Oscar Ho refuses to limit his definition of art to 'fine arts'
only. Over the years, he has also organised a number of community
projects by working with activists and community groups. He
believes that art should actively respond to the needs of
the community.
Oscar
Ho says: "My interest in Hong Kong culture was partly
socio-political because of the sense of crisis triggered by
the reunification." In 1991 he launched the "Hong
Kong Culture Series" with The Art of Li Tiefu
exhibition. This intended to reveal Hong Kong's distinctive
culture. This series also focused on the much ignored but
very interesting part of Hong Kong culture, the popular culture,
exhibitions such as The Art of Kwan Wai Lung, Yau Leung
Retrospective and Hong Kong Sixties: Designing Identity
were organised respectively. By 1996, when a wave of so-called
sudden patriotism emerged in Hong Kong, Oscar Ho organised
Being China (Being Hong Kong) exhibition with an attempt
to reveal the ambiguity of our nationalistic passion. From
1997 to 1999, Oscar Ho turned curating into a creating act.
He curated exhibitions about "Lo Ting", and created
a fake history museum. Through these exhibitions, it was hoped
to challenge not only the idea of the museum, but also the
authority of history.
By viewing
both Oscar Ho's works, one might realize the common ground
between his artistic creation and curatorial work. His early
studies on anthropology and his influence by "Funk"
Artists have certainly shaped his curatorial thinking. The
mythology of Stories around Town was perhaps an artist
version of the fabricated "Lo Ting" exhibitions.
During his days at the Arts Centre, Oscar seldom had his work
shown locally to avoid the conflict of interest. This exhibition,
however, will show his art together with his curatorial works,
inviting audiences to have a review of the dynamic between
the works of a curator and artist.
This exhibition
is co-curated by Eliza Lai and Irene Ngan. In conjunction
with the exhibition, a catalogue will be published with articles
by critics, exhibition documentations and selected works by
Oscar Ho.
Discussion
Saturday, 27th November 2004
Time: 3 - 4.30pm
Venue: Para/Site Art Space
Conducted in Cantonese, Free admission, Limited seats available.
Presented
by Para/Site Art Space
Press enquiries: info@para-site.org.hk
or 2517 4620
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