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Through Time and Tide: Central and Tsim Sha Tsui Through the lens of Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster
Through Time and Tide: Central and Tsim Sha Tsui Through the lens of Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster
2:21
Video Transcript

ALAN YEUNG: (Cantonese) Hello! Today, I would like to introduce a video work in the M+ collection. It's called Central, created by the French artist Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster in 2001.

The protagonist plans to meet with her brother at Star Ferry Pier. Whilst waiting for him, she goes to Kowloon Public Pier to observe the strangers. Like her, those strangers are fascinated by this liminal space. Not daring approach them, she looks at their backs from far away and riding on the mere spark of resonance between them, imagines their inner worlds, their longings and fear

Year 2001 is 23 years ago. Twenty-three years, as a timespan, is sort of subtle. It can mean the coming of age or passing of a generation. But personal memories from 23 years ago can feel vividly alive. The Tsim Sha Tsui Waterfront Park and the public pier upon renovation have changed thoroughly. But the ferry in the shots and the views of Hong Kong Island apparently look just the same.

Our fantasies shall one day pass as memories and our memories can in turn trigger imaginations on the future.

Back then, what was the thing that moved the artist? Was it the visual stimuli brought by the concrete jungle, or the rhythm of the Harbour’s waves and the sailing ships?

Probably, it’s just like what the protagonist says: it's the moisture and stench in the air.

“Looking at a landscape like an immense face. It’s perhaps a disappearance. Trying to decipher the future. As if it were a rainy day”

In 2001, artist Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster made Central, as a part of a loose trilogy of works set in different waterfront locations. Though titled Central, alluding to the district of Hong Kong Island, the film is set in Tsim Sha Tsui’s Star Ferry Pier and Kowloon Public Pier, the cape of Kowloon Peninsula, with views across Victoria Harbour to Central accompanied by a narrator waiting for her brother to arrive.

Alan Yeung, a curator at M+, invites us to consider the narrator’s perspective, noting how her reflections of the area resonate with other visitors to the harbour. While nostalgia lingers in our memories of the past and in the film’s grainy visuals, icons like the Star Ferry and the boats passing calmly in front of Central’s skyline feel familiar despite changes over decades.

Video still showing the rear view of a person standing at a waterfront, looking out to boats and skyscrapers across the water. Subtitles at the bottom of the still read, 'She looks like the monolith from 2001, A Space Odyssey'.

Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster. Central, 2001. Single-channel Super 8mm and 35mm film transferred to digital video. M+, Hong Kong. © Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster, courtesy of 303 Gallery

And while the surroundings have evolved, Central tenderly recalls our role in investing places with meaning over time. Gonzalez-Foerster’s film poetically shows how remembering the past seeds the imagination for the future and how a location’s history is gently woven into its present form.

Central is on view in the M+ Mediatheque.

Video Credits

Produced by

M+

Presented by

Alan Yeung

Production

Jiu Jik Park Limited

Director

Hui Chi Sang

Camera

Mak Chi Ho, Yung Tsz Hong

Camera Assistant

Kermit Tang

Production Assistant

Lui Ka Suen Veronica

Editor

Yung Tsz Hong

Animation Designer

Lo Yuet Yui Joyce

M+ Producer

Mimi Cheung, Rachel Chan

M+ Text Editing

Amy Leung, LW Lam

Special Thanks

Alan Yeung, Chris Sullivan, Fei Hung, Sewon Barrera

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