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Jeffrey Shaw: Legible City Hong Kong

19 July - 6 October

Free
M+

EVENT DESCRIPTION

M+, Asia’s global museum of contemporary visual culture in the West Kowloon Cultural District in Hong Kong, will present Legible City Hong Kong, the latest iteration of the pioneering media artwork Legible City (1989–1991) by Jeffrey Shaw (born 1944), made in collaboration with Hong Kong fiction writer Dung Kai-cheung (born 1967). In this work, visitors are invited to ride a stationary bicycle, which is connected to a large screen that displays a digital landscape of Hong Kong, where the rider roams freely. The interactive installation will open to the public free of charge at M+’s Found Space from Friday, 19 July to Sunday, 6 October 2024On Friday nights during the exhibition period, the M+ Facade will livestream directly from the installation, showing visitors’ journeys in real time. On other nights, the facade will show a video recording of the work.

Legible City Hong Kong presents a digital landscape based on the Central, Sheung Wan, and Sai Ying Pun neighbourhoods in the mid-to-late nineteenth century. The buildings are replaced by 3D bold text adapted from the third part of Dung’s novel Hong Kong Type: A Love Letter Late for One Hundred and Fifty Years, a tragic love story set in nineteenth-century Hong Kong. As visitors journey through this city of words, they encounter Dung’s text, rendered in Hong Kong Type, a movable typeface invented in the city more than a hundred years ago. Legible City Hong Kong is Shaw’s tribute to the city, its remarkable topography, and the many stories that have unfolded here.

ABOUT THE ARTIST / ORGANISER

Jeffrey Shaw (born 1944, Australia) has been a leading figure in new media art since its emergence from the performance, expanded cinema, and installation paradigms of the 1960s to their technologised and virtualised forms in the present day. He has pioneered the creative use of digital media technologies in the fields of expanded cinema, virtual and augmented reality, immersive visualisation environments, navigable cinematic systems, and interactive narratives. Shaw’s artworks are milestones of technological and cultural innovation that have had a seminal impact on the theory, design, and application of digital media in art, society, and industry, and his artistic achievements are among the most cited in new media literature. These include Corpocinema (1969), Viewpoint (1975), the laser and slideshows for the world tours of British rock band Genesis in the mid-1970s, Points of View (1983), Narrative Landscape (1985), Inventer la Terre (1986), Heavens Gate (1987), Legible City (1989), The Virtual Museum (1991), EVE (1993), Golden Calf (1995), conFiguring the CAVE (1997), The Web of Life (2000), PLACE-Hampi (2006), T_Visionarium (2008), Pure Land (2012), The Infinite Line (2014), Recombinatory Poetry Wheel (2018), and WYSIWYG (2019). His works have been presented at various galleries and institutions, including Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam, Centre Pompidou in Paris, Kunsthalle Bern, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York, and Hayward Gallery in London.

Dung Kai-cheung (born 1967, Hong Kong) is one of the most prominent writers in Hong Kong. His work explores the possibilities of literary genres and forms and encompasses subject matter from historical recreation to futuristic imagination. He began writing in the early 1990s and has published more than thirty titles in Chinese. Among them, Atlas: The Archaeology of an Imaginary CityCantonese Love StoriesThe History of the Adventures of Vivi and Vera, and A Catalog of Such Stuff as Dreams Are Made On have been translated into English, and a number of Dung’s shorter pieces have been translated into English, French, Dutch, Swedish, Macedonian, and Japanese. Since winning the Unitas Fiction Award for New Writers in 1994, Dung has received numerous literary awards in Hong Kong and Taiwan, including the Jury Awards from the Dream of the Red Chamber Award: The World’s Distinguished Novel in Chinese (2006, 2008, 2020); the Hong Kong Book Prize (2011, 2017, 2018, 2020); Artist of the Year (Literary Arts) from the Hong Kong Arts Development Awards (2008); Writer of the Year at Hong Kong Book Fair (2014); and Grand Prize (Fiction) at the Taipei International Book Exhibition (2019). Dung graduated from the University of Hong Kong with a Bachelor of Arts degree and a Master of Philosophy degree in comparative literature.

Details

Start:
19 July
End:
6 October
Admission:
Free
Event Category:
,

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