Compiled from the Performing Arts programmes* and Visual Arts exhibition records from HKADC’s Arts Yearbooks and Annual Arts Survey projects dating from 2010.

Safeguarding the Community: An Intangible Cultural Heritage New Media Exhibition

Visual Arts

Event Detail Image
Art Genres / Sub-categories

New Media Art

Location

Hong Kong City Hall, Exhibition Hall

Start Date

2018/09/14

End Date

2018/10/10

Art Genres / Sub-categories

New Media Art

Location

Hong Kong City Hall, Exhibition Hall

Start Date

2018/09/14

End Date

2018/10/10

Safeguarding the Community: An Intangible Cultural Heritage New Media Exhibition

The 4th Hong Kong Culture Festival

Description

Description

Centered on a series of significant historical events, the exhibition will illustrate the emergence of several Hong Kong Intangible Cultural Heritage. The exhibition entrance will recreate the interior of a traditional Chinese house, as the roof is supported by magnificent wooden pillars as a representation of a haven, visitors enter a safe community upheld by its people. The extensive collection will be complemented by digital media, which enriches visitors’ experience of intangible culture.
Through a closer look at the coastal communities in Fujian and Guangdong in the past four centuries, a period filled with natural hazards as well as unrest, audience will be introduced to the different practices taken for the sake of survival, and how they have in time become indispensable as parts of the local intangible cultural heritage. The exhibition will consist of two sections – Starting with a dialogue on piratical disturbances and inter-lineage feuds, hence the emergence of Fujianese Martial Arts, the oldest martial arts system in South China, developed historically to defend the communities against attacks. The second part of the exhibition will delve into rituals that were believed to have kept away spiritual threats, such as Hakka unicorn dance, fire dragon dance and parade, and Jiao Festival. These martial arts and traditions, nowadays regarded as invaluable cultural heritage, were once the key to safeguarding the communities.

Atop conventional exhibits such as texts, images and displays, the exhibition offers its visitors a multisensory experience with boxing manual animation, Hakka Unicorn Dance water projection, 360-degree immersive projection of Jiao Festival in Lam Tsuen that only takes place every 10 years, a fire dragon dance 3D animation created by renowned visual effects director Victor Wong and creative director Anothermountainman (Stanley Wong), and more.

Amongst the valuable exhibits, is an over 3-metre long Wako-Zukan (Wokou Scroll) lent by University of Tokyo. With a Linear Navigator developed by exhibition curator, Professor Jeffrey Shaw of School of Creative Media, City University of Hong Kong, the weapons and martial skills used to defend against invaders are augmented in details with masters’ demonstrations, making it one of the major highlights of the exhibition.

Artists:Anothermountainman; Victor Wong

Note:This event record is compiled from "Hong Kong Visual Arts Yearbook 2018" published by Department of Fine Arts, The Chinese University of Hong Kong.

Info

Indoor / Outdoor

Indoor

error: Content is protected !!