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Hong Kong x 24 x 365

A Year in the Life of a City

(香港:城市生活寫照)

David Clarke

ISBN : 978-962-209-817-6


Film, Media, Fine Arts

December 2006

176 pages, 11″ x 8.5″, 260 color illus.


Hardback
  • HK$295.00


AFTER
. . . the colonial era
. . . the return to Chinese sovereignty
. . . the Asian economic crisis
. . . the property slump
. . . SARS
. . . half a million people marching for democracy on 1 July 2003

. . . after . . . History with a capital ‘H’, which visited Hong Kong for the 1997 handover, had moved its spotlight somewhere else (to economically burgeoning mainland China, perhaps) . . .

. . . and BEFORE . . . well, who knows, but certainly before fully democratic elections,

. . . Hong Kong was left becalmed, with a sense that things were not really moving forward.

This in-between phase, without major dramas, where history was only with a small ‘h’, is the subject of this locally orientated micro-historical analysis of one of the world’s great cities—which had so lost self-confidence in this period that it started promoting itself as ‘Asia’s World City’, but which might yet prove to be a city that changes China (and therefore the world). Specifying this time, through a collection of colour photographs taken during a randomly chosen twelve-month period, David Clarke presents a year in the life of the city in which he has lived for the last two decades. An antidote to the tourist picture-postcard view of Hong Kong which is so often propagated to locals and visitors alike, these images and their accompanying text are produced from a proximity which enables both a critical engagement with the city and a celebration of its uniqueness. Personal in its perspective, this extended photo essay invites you to join a fabricated journey through the real space of Hong Kong, looking awry at scenes too often photographed before, and looking anew at scenes too often overlooked.

David Clarke teaches in the Department of Fine Arts of the University of Hong Kong. He is both a photographer and an art historian, and his photographic art has been exhibited many times in Hong Kong, as well as in a number of other countries, including Australia and Canada. His black and white photos of Hong Kong during the handover years are featured in Reclaimed Land: Hong Kong in Transition (Hong Kong University Press, 2002). Among his other books are Hong Kong Art: Culture and Decolonization and Modern Chinese Art.