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Hong Kong Art

Culture and Decolonization

(香港藝術:文化與非殖民化)

David Clarke

ISBN : 978-962-209-564-9


Film, Media, Fine Arts

November 2001

240 pages


For sale in Hong Kong SAR only

Paperback
  • HK$0.00
No longer available

Hong Kong Art is the first comprehensive survey of contemporary art from Hong Kong presented within the changing social and political context of the territory’s 1997 handover from British to Chinese sovereignty. Tracing a distinctive and increasingly vibrant art scene from the late 1960s through the present, David Clarke discusses a wide range of media, including painting, sculpture, photography, video, and installations, as well as other kinds of visual production such as architecture, fashion, graphic design, and graffiti.

Clarke shows how a sense of local identity emerged in Hong Kong as the transition approached and found expression in the often politicized art produced. Given the recent international exposure of mainland Chinese contemporary art, this book considers the uniqueness of the art of China’s most cosmopolitan city. With a modern visual culture that was flourishing even when the People’s Republic was still closed to the outside world, Hong Kong has established itself as an exemplary site for both local and transnational elements to formulate into brilliant and groundbreaking art.

David Clarke is Associate Professor in the Department of Fine Art at the University of Hong Kong. He is the author of The Influence of Oriental Thought on Post-war American Painting and Sculpture (1988), Art & Place: Essays on Art from a Hong Kong Perspective (1996) and Modern Chinese Art (1999).