Kacey Wong

This is a Chinese name; the family name is Wong (黃).
Kacey Wong

Kacey Wong drawing blind
Born 1970
Hong Kong
Nationality Hong Kong Chinese
Education Cornell University (architecture); Chelsea College of Arts (sculpture); Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (fine arts)[1]
Known for Visual arts, architecture, sculpture
Notable work Drift City (2000), Wandering Home, (2008), Paddling Home (2009)
Website kaceywong.com
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese 黃國才
Simplified Chinese 黃国才

Dr. Kacey Wong (born 1970) is a Hong Kong visual artist and educator[2] – formerly Assistant Professor at the School of Design, Hong Kong Polytechnic University.[1][3] Wong has received the Hong Kong Contemporary Arts Award by the Hong Kong Art Museum (2012), Best Artist Award (2010); and Rising Artist Award and Outstanding Arts Education Award (2003).[4]

Early life and education

Wong Kwok-choi was born in 1970 in Hong Kong. Due to concerns about the future of Hong Kong at the time, Wong was sent away at the age of 14 to Long Island in the United States as a secondary school pupil.[5][6] His chosen name "Kacey" is derived from the initials of his Chinese name.[7] Wong was admitted to Cornell University, from where he obtained a bachelor's degree in Architecture.[8] He has practiced internationally as an architect and artist. His sculptures explore philosophical ideas that engage the body of the viewer. He holds a master's degree in Sculpture at Chelsea College of Arts.[1][5][6] Wong also obtained his Doctorate in Fine Arts from the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology in 2003.[1]

Career

Upon graduation from university, Wong worked as an architect for nearly six years in New York, Japan, and Hong Kong, in the fields of graphic, interior and architectural design. He set up in independent practice.[8] Finding that the professional world as an architect did not allow for the degree of freedom he desired, he gave up a well-paid professional career and left for further studies in England.[5][8] After finishing the masters programme in London in 1998, Wong returned to Hong Kong and taught sculpture and art appreciation at the Chinese University of Hong Kong for two years.[8][9] Wong later became Assistant professor in the school of design at the Hong Kong Polytechnic University, until 2015.[1][8]

In 2003, Wong was bestowed the Rising Artist Award by the Hong Kong Arts Council and Outstanding Arts Education Award.[1] The Hong Kong Museum of Art awarded Wong their Hong Kong Contemporary Arts Award in 2012.[4]

Works

Wong stated that most people take for granted what they possess, and may be without identity or culture. Wong says his self-awareness, and what Hong Kong represents to him, stem from the years he spent abroad. He says that only by living amidst a second culture can one fully come to realise what one represents and where one belongs. A thread that runs through much of his work is therefore the notion of home, homelessness and wandering.[5][7] Since 2011, his repertoire has taken on a political dimension.

Space

Home (1999), Personal Skyscraper (2000), and City Space (2001) were exhibitions where Wong was both exhibitor and curator.

"10 Boxes: Everything I've Ever Thought About, I Put Inside a Box" in 2000 was Wong's first solo exhibition. The series of ten sculptures, housed in wall-mounted boxes, each having its own name, explores a different theme or spatial relationship.[10] For example, Office Block symbolises the power structures within companies; Only You is based on romantic relations; Destroy Them treats subjects like education and childhood influences.[11]

In 2008, Wong created Wandering Home, an installation consisting of a mobile home conceptualised on city living and the homeless, which was shown at the Venice Biennale of Architecture.[12] The small tin hut on the back of a tricycle is a comment on Hong Kong society, and the plight of people who sleep on the streets and who are forced to move on periodically by government officials. Costing HK$5,000 to make, the house is not exactly a practical solution to the homeless, but the concept was tried out on street sleepers in Sham Shui Po.[13][14][15] In 2008, Wong created Tin Man No.11, an essay in space in the form of a metallic robot that transforms into a bed.[6] He extended the concept by creating Famiglia Grande, a series of transformable cases.[12][16][17][18] In 2009, Wong attended the Subvision Festival in Hamburg as a skyscraper.[19]

His work Paddling Home, a 4 ft × 4 ft (1.2 m × 1.2 m) floating house, was set to sea in January 2010. The work, symbolising the Hong Kong's property market where the accommodation is high-density, small and pricey, was selected at the Hong Kong & Shenzhen Bi City Biennale of Urbanism Architecture exhibition that year.[20][21] The design includes tiled walls, wooden floorboards, bay windows, a television, air-conditioning, roof space from which to drive a few golf balls and a 5-horsepower outboard motor.[22][23] It was priced at a symbolical HK$888,888 ($114,000). Wong said that, as the square foot price is [an astronomical] HK$55,555, Paddling Home is an ironic statement comparing the perils of owning a glitzily- and glossily-packaged high end residence to being on the high seas.[24] When asked in 2012, Wong said he considers Paddling Home his most challenging work to date.[25]

Ball Ball (2014)

He published a photographic book, Drift City 2000–2010, as the culmination of a ten-year project where he travelled the world and superposed himself as a cardboard skyscraper (Skyscraper Man) in different surroundings as a critique of modernism.[26] For the project, Wong collected images from over 20 locations around the world, including one at the Egyptian pyramids made when he and his wife were on honeymoon in 2002. That image cost him a three-hour art lecture to police who demanded a substantial "photography fee".[26]

Environmentalism

Wong became interested in environmentalism through visiting a waste reprocessing centre in Hong Kong, and realising just how little was recycled. His works re-use or recycle materials obtained from rubbish tips.[2][4] In 2010, Wong curated "Memory of the Forest", a collection of animal sculptures by himself and 13 students made using discarded wood, which symbolises the animals' lost habitats.[7][27][28][29] Wong contributed a similar "Mega Musical Art Piece" to the 2012 Hong Kong Cleanup campaign in the form of an octopus.[2][30] Wong participated in a campaign of the Ocean Recovery Alliance in Hong Kong in April 2013, contributing Death by Amputation – a sculpture of a life-sized finned shark – to an exhibition in Stanley harbour in the hope that it will provoke thought on the source of food and the cruelty inflicted by humans on animals.[31][32][33] In 2014, as part of an animal-themed exhibition with other artists, he unveiled Ball Ball, an imposing sculpture of his one-eyed cat again made of discarded wood.[34]

Wong's The Cultural Bureau leading 1 July 2012 protest march

Protest art

Wong cites his political awakening being in 2011, following the arrest of mainland artist Ai Weiwei.[5][35] He responded by forming a group named Art Citizens (藝術公民), and rallied some 2,000 artists to march for Ai on 23 April.[36][37] As curator for the group, he put together a month-long exhibition that opened on 26 May named "Love the Future" (愛未來) – a pun on Ai's name – with works of over 50 artists.[38][39] Wong's own showpiece, a Caonima (alpaca) sculpture, was one of the stars of the show.[38] Since then, Wong has become known for his eye-catching displays at public demonstrations drawing attention to Hong Kong's political situation.[35][37]

Fond of quoting Ai, Wong believes that art and politics are indissociable, and that no art is completely without political connotation. Wong sees art as one of the organic elements in the mix of political movements, playing an indirect and auxiliary role.[3][4] He has variously participated in the annual 1 July protest marches riding in a pink armoured personnel carrier, walking around with a facsimile washing machine on his head, and guiding a 10-foot red robot he created.[5][40][41] For the march on 1 July 2014, Wong created the “Warning Squad", where he and several people dressed as police officers holding parody banners inspired by those increasingly seen used by police officers at protests. His signs included “Love the Party” – echoing the CPC slogan “Love the country, love the Party” (愛國愛黨) – “Fake Commie”; “Party-State” referring to the one-party state within China; “Reddening” referring to the gradual infiltration of the communist ethos into Hong Kong; “Land Grabbing” referring to the land acquisition for development in the Northeast New Territories.[42]

Wong drawing portraits during the Umbrella Revolution

Wong was highly active during the Umbrella Revolution: he held a contest for the best logo to elevate awareness and generate more concern for the demand for "real universal suffrage" for Hong Kong. Using social media as a "safe platform" for universal participation, he generated considerable awareness and received entries from all over the world.[43][44][45][46] Wong held sessions where he would draw a person's portrait in one minute without looking at the paper the concept inspired by Nelson Mandela's maxim "It always seems impossible until it's done". He also co-founded Umbrella Movement Art Preservation, to make an inventory of works and their locations at protest sites, aiming to rescue key pieces before police clearances.[47][48]

For his personal exhibition in March 2015 entitled "Resisting Against Absurdity", Wong reunited pieces he created for previous protest marches and added new works:[35][49] in particular the Black Cop Candle – a set of wax statues of policemen in riot gear and raised batons. These symbolise the seven "black" (meaning corrupt) cops who beat up a protester and who were caught on film so doing during the 2014 protests; lighting the candles would melt them and transform them into light.[50][51]

Wong protesting at booksellers' disappearances with red gallows bearing the Chinese characters for "abduction" as props

At a march protesting at the disappearances of the staff of Causeway Bay Books in 2015, Wong symbolically constructed a red gallows carrying the Chinese characters for "abduction" (綁架), bound himself with red rope and gagged himself with red duct tape.[52]

Other roles

Wong co-founded Street Design Union to study and advance the role of artists and designers in the socio-political sphere.[4] Since 2001, he has taken his "Personal Skyscraper Workshops" to primary schools to encourage children to admire the architecture. He does this by having pupils create wearable architectural clothing with foam boards and paper.[8]

In 2016, the M+ in Hong Kong commissioned Wong to create the "M+ Rover" – a mobile gallery for their schools outreach programme. The Rover was created out of a hollowed-out container in which was installed a wooden interior using disused pallets to create the feel of a whale.[53]

Personal

Wong is an avid fan of war-games – an activity he partakes in every week which he says helps with mental agility. He also enjoys diving.[8] Wong and his wife Margaret live with Ballball – a cat which had lost an eye in an accident. Wong chose to adopt him over other cats because he was unique.[7][54] Wong said: "Imagine you were to go to a pet shop and ask for a one-eyed cat... 'Sorry we don't do those' would be the response".[54]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "PolyU Design: Kacey Kwok-choi Wong". PolyU Design. Archived from the original on 2 April 2015.
  2. 1 2 3 "Eco Drum to Voice Sustainability". go.asia. 29 January 2013.
  3. 1 2 抗爭現場搞藝術,所為何事?—黃國才與俞若玫談抗爭藝術. 藝頻:藝術推廣新聞頻道先導計劃 (in Chinese). 13 November 2014.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 Wong, Esther (8 May 2013). "Kacey Wong". Ecozine.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "生活達人﹕以抗爭藝術復修家園". Ming Pao, 9 March 2014 (Chinese) Archived from the original on 2 April 2015
  6. 1 2 3 "KACEY WONG黄国才" (in Chinese). whatsnext30x30.com.
  7. 1 2 3 4 "Kacey Wong is 'Superbeast'". Raw Magazine, No. 1. December 2011
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Cha, Sylvia. "Building Dreams / 看透是一種藝術 – A look at 黃國才 (Kacey Wong)s delicate works", Muse (2008),
  9. "Cover story". iMag, 3 November 2000, pg. 8.
  10. Thomas, Ralph (21 April 2000). "Box of tricks". South China Morning Post.
  11. Binks, Hilary. "Boxed In". World Sculpture News (spring 2000)
  12. 1 2 "「大鐵人」反思港人蝸居苦". Sing Tao Daily, 15 November 2009 (Chinese)
  13. "Mobilizing the Homeless", pg. HK-4, China Daily (Hong Kong edition), 24 January 2008
  14. "三個車轆裝起流浪的心", pg. A26. Ming Pao, 4 January 2008 (Chinese)
  15. Lai, Ying-kit (4 January 2008). "Tricycle mobile home offers little comfort for the homeless". South China Morning Post
  16. "一個流動豪宅之夢/Kacey Wong Dream of Street Sleepers", AM 730. 12 April 2010 (Chinese)
  17. "I, Robot", Plan Magazine, March 2010
  18. "Morar dentro de um carro", Sabado, 22 April 2010 (Portuguese)
  19. "An Art Boom in Hong Kong". Time. 16 August 2010.
  20. "Two Men Show展場:海". Apple Daily (in Chinese). 21 January 2010.
  21. 以藝術呈現樓市的迷思. Macau Daily (in Chinese). 24 September 2013.
  22. "Il était un petit... houseboat". Moteur Boat, Oct 2010, pp. 22–23 (French)
  23. DeWolf, Christopher (17 January 2010). "Art show that's struggling to stay afloat", pg. 3, South China Morning Post
  24. "16方尺漂流屋「售」88.8888萬". Sing Tao Daily, 4 December 2009 (Chinese)
  25. "Kacey Wong", Time Out (Hong Kong). 9–22 May 2012, pg 24.
  26. 1 2 "紙皮大廈披上身 黃國才十載遊離都市". Headline News. Sing Tao Daily, 20 December 2010 (Chinese)
  27. "The Works :Ai Weiwei in Hong Kong; Movie Review – "Iron Man 2"; Hong Kong Turkish Film Festival; "Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead"; "Memory of the Forest"". RTHK. 11 May 2010.
  28. "香港雕塑發展新貌", AM 730. 31 May 2010 (Chinese)
  29. "黃國才", U Magazine, April 2010 (Chinese)
  30. "The Hong Kong Cleanup Exhibit". Hong Kong Cleanup, 18 January 2013
  31. "Ocean film festival conjures up goddess of sharks". South China Morning Post. 10 April 2013.
  32. 垃圾升華變藝術 另類保育海洋. Apple Daily (in Chinese). 9 April 2013.
  33. "廢材藝術品喚醒保育海洋". pg. 46. Headline News (Hong Kong), 19 April 2013
  34. "Hong Kong Bestiary". ArtAsiaPacific. November 2014.
  35. 1 2 3 Zoe, Li (5 March 2015). "Kacey Wong's Protest Art Goes on View in Hong Kong in the Wake of the Umbrella Movement". artnet.news. Retrieved 19 March 2015.
  36. "Hong Kong Graffiti Challenges Chinese Artist's Arrest". NPR. 4 May 2011.
  37. 1 2 黃國才:用藝術去改變世界. Apple Daily (in Chinese). 25 September 2014.
  38. 1 2 Jim, Alice Ming-Wai (2014). "Love the Future – Ai Weiwei and Art for Human Rights". In Henders, Susan J.; Cho, Lily. Human Rights and the Arts: Perspectives on Global Asia. Lexington Books. pp. 33–35. ISBN 978-0739184738.
  39. Steven River. "愛未來 Love the Future Exhibition". Issuu – 10 magazine. pp. 31–47.
  40. "城市夢遊", Next Magazine, 13 September 2012 (Chinese)
  41. 藝術家製道具讓市民進擊  10呎「共人」諷吃人政權. Apple Daily (in Chinese). 1 July 2013.
  42. "Protest art criticises police 'repression' of pro-democracy activists". Hong Kong Free Press.
  43. Li, Zoe (3 October 2014). "Best designs for the Hong Kong Umbrella Revolution". artnet News.
  44. "Branding a Revolution". The Huffington Post.
  45. "How the humble umbrella became a HK protest symbol". BBC News. 29 September 2014.
  46. Chow, Vivienne (29 September 2014). "Umbrella Revolution: more designs on Hong Kong’s protest movement". South China Morning Post
  47. Sataline, Suzanne (16 November 2014). "Will Hong Kong’s protest art be saved?" Boston Globe
  48. Lau, Joyce (14 November 2014). "Art Spawned by Protest; Now to Make It Live On". The New York Times.
  49. "Hong Kong artists break loose from confines of market forces amid Art Basel". South China Morning Post. 11 March 2015.
  50. "Artists take stock of the Umbrella Movement". The Art Newspaper. 17 March 2015. Archived from the original on 20 March 2015.
  51. "Art and politics collide at Art Basel Hong Kong". The Star. Malaysia. 17 March 2015.
  52. "【曾為何韻詩設計太空船】本地藝術家黃國才親歷血紅綁架". Apple Daily (in Chinese).
  53. http://www.westkowloon.hk/en/whats-on/current-forthcoming/m-rover
  54. 1 2 "黃國才", pp 16–19, Art Plus. No. 41 (Chinese)
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