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Podcast One: The Works - tfvsjs; HK Artists Tsang Chui-mei and Vivian Poon; Carlos Cruz-Diez; Tjoe Man Cheung
Local post-rock band tfvsjs have been wowing local indie music fans for some time. They’ve even appeared on one of our 藝坊星期天 and The Works concerts. Now, a couple of the members have started a new venture: a restaurant and art space. But creativity still remains a big part of the game plan. At the Mur Nomade gallery until 19th July is a joint exhibition by two Hong Kong artists Tsang Chui-mei and Vivian Poon. They’ve worked together to conceive and present new works including drawings, paintings and mixed-media pieces. The title of the exhibition sic/sic and the artists say the pieces are all about presenting the several layers of meaning present in the phrase. Paris-based artist Carlos Cruz-Diez's brightly coloured work may dazzle your eyes. He’s lived and worked in Paris since 1960, and his art has its origins in the Movimiento Cinético (Kinetic Movement) of the 1950s and 1960s. His aim is to study the ways in which colour can behave. In collaboration with Le French May, the University of Hong Kong Museum and Art Gallery is presenting, until 17th August, the exhibition “Circumstance And Ambiguity Of Colour”. Tjoe Man Cheung has been active in the local jazz, indie and pop music scene since 2010. You might see or hear him playing guitar for pop-music artists, performing as a sideman for bands, or working with international musicians. He also composes and arranges, and now has a new CD out. He’s in the studio talking to Billy Lee.
podcast.rthk.hk/podcast/item.php?pid=76&eid=43305&lang=en-US
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Podcast One: The Works - “No Country: Contemporary Art for South and Southeast Asia”; Emma Hack; Antigone in the NT; Drag Art
From February to May this year, the Guggenheim Museum in New York City featured the exhibition “No Country: Contemporary Art for South and Southeast Asia”. Bangladesh, Cambodia, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Myanmar, Pakistan, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam, and includes – say the organisers - some of the most compelling and innovative voices in South and Southeast Asia today. And for the next few months you can see it at the Asia Society's Hong Kong Branch. Over the summer, the Cat Street Gallery featured the first Hong Kong exhibition of Australian artist Emma Hack. Emma’s works are photographs. But they are also, in an unusual way, paintings in which human beings are present but almost invisible. Music lovers may know her work from her collaboration with Gotye on his music video for “Somebody that I used to know”. The exhibition at the Cat Street Gallery is over now, but Emma’s works can still be viewed at the Cat Street Gallery Annex in Aberdeen. “Antigone” is the story of a woman whose two brothers, on opposite sides in the civil war, die in battle. Creon, now the ruler of Thebes, rules that one of them Eteocles, who fought for him, will be honoured. The other, Polynices, who fought on the opposite side, will not be sanctified, and will lie on the battlefield to rot. Antigone defies this law and buries her brother, for which she is bricked up behind a wall where she hangs herself. Sophocles wrote the tragedy more than 2000 years ago, but it still has meaning today. As part of the People's Fringe Festival, one local theatre group decided to perform it in the open air in tthe North East New Territories. Australian Trevor Ashley has been performing cabaret professionally since taking part in the Sydney Cabaret Convention in 1998. His performance there wowed the critics and led to several long-running shows. Trevor is in Hong Kong this week to perform.He's also in our studio, talking to Ben Pelletier about his new show “Starstruck” ... with a little help from none other than the legendary Dame Shirley Bassey
podcast.rthk.hk/podcast/item.php?pid=76&eid=36033&lang=en-US
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