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Still of VHS video titled 'Here's Looking At You, Kid!'. A middle-aged woman is sitting at the front of a theatre with red seats. Blue subtitles in Chinese say 'I'll bring you I'll bring you I'll bring you'.

Self x Society

Details
Director: Multiple
Format: 61 min.
Language: Cantonese (with Chinese and English subtitles)
Audience: Everyone
Location: House 1
Accessibility: Wheelchair
More Info:

Ticket Information

Standard: HKD 85

Concession: HKD 68

Still of VHS video titled 'Here's Looking At You, Kid!'. A middle-aged woman is sitting at the front of a theatre with red seats. Blue subtitles in Chinese say 'I'll bring you I'll bring you I'll bring you'.

Self x Society

Since its invention, Moving Image has served as an art form that allows filmmakers and artists to frame their perception of the world visually and conceptually. Starting from the 1960s, artists have employed the medium even more consciously as a discursive tool asserting their individuality and critical perspective. This programme of experimental films spanning five decades explores the various paradoxes that individuals face within a society. The films delve into the constructs of historical and socio-political issues, the anxieties of youth, and the absurdities of everyday life. Rendering these complex interplays through performance, humorous interventions, and formal experimentations, the featured artists testify of a wealth of creative strategies to celebrate the power of waywardness.

Rajendra Gour’s Eyes (1968), Chen Chien-Jen’s Dysfunction No.3 (1983), and Han Ok-Hee's The Hole (1974) feature the artists’ commentary on Cold War related world events and address personal experiences with the brutality of repressive political systems. Kuang-Yu Tsui’s The Shortcut to the Systematic Life: City Spirits (2005) celebrates artistic agency through the artist’s bold takeover of public space. City Dog (1992) by Koson Trongtosak, Sathien Preedasa, Amnuay Mangmeesri, and Chavalit Potisri portrays a man’s psychological tension provoked by the effects of Asia’s rapid urbanisation. Here’s Looking At You, Kid! (1990) by Yau Ching, Ellen Pau, and Wong Chi Fai critically reviews Hong Kong’s colonial history, while Wong Ping’s Fables 1 (2018) humorously transforms the anxiety of youth into an absurd animation.

Asian Avant-Garde Film Festival Guests
Asian Avant-Garde Film Festival Guests
1:19
Still of video title 'Eyes'. A blurry closeup of an eye, overlaid with many images of the same eye looking in different directions.

Rajendra Gour. Eyes, 1968. Photo: Courtesy of Asian Film Archive

Still of black and white video titled 'Dysfunction No. 3'. Five men are wearing the same outfit consisting of a white t-shirt and baggy pants. A bag covers each of their heads with an additional band wrapped outside of the bag. Behind them are a group of people.

Chen Chieh-Jen. Dysfunction No. 3,1983, restored 2017. 8mm film transferred to digital; single-channel video (colour, sound) and giclée print, duration: 10 min. 19 sec.. M+, Hong Kong. © Chen Chieh-jen

Still of black and white video titled 'The Hole'. A man appears to be running in a field. The periphery of the still is blurry.

Han Ok-hee. The Hole, 1974. Photo: Courtesy of National Asian Culture Center

Still of video titled 'The Shortcut to the Systematic Life: City Spirits'. In a courtyard, a person wearing a red jacket throws a black ball towards a flock of pigeons. There is visible traffic around the courtyard.

Tsui Kuang-Yu. The Shortcut to the Systematic Life: City Spirits, 2005. Photo: Courtesy of the artist

Still of video titled 'City Dog'. A close up of a person in a blue t-shirt sleeping with one hand wrapped around his own torso and one over his head. His bed appears to be a thin white fabric on top of metal frame.

Koson Trongtosak, Sathien Preedasa, Amnuay Mangmeesri, Chavalit Potisri. City Dog, 1992. Photo: Courtesy of Thai Film Archive

Black and white still of a VHS video titled 'Here's Looking At You, Kid!'. In a crowd, an Asian child looks into the distance as everyone else is looking a different direction. Blue subtitles in Chinese say 'You lied to me you lied to me'.

Yau Ching, Ellen Pau, Wong Chi-fai. Here's Looking At You, Kid!, 1990. Photo: Courtesy of Videotage © Yau Ching, Ellen Pau, Wong Chi-fai

Still of animated video titled 'Wong Ping's Fables 1'. A blue creature sits on the left reading. A bloodstain is on the ground. There is a potted plant nearby.

Wong Ping. Wong Ping’s Fables 1, 2018. Photo: Courtesy of the artist

Image at top: Yau Ching, Ellen Pau, Wong Chi-fai. Here's Looking At You, Kid!, 1990. Photo: Courtesy of Videotage © Yau Ching, Ellen Pau, Wong Chi-fai

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