Lifestyle

How prehistoric and ancient cultures used art revealed in Hong Kong exhibition

0
Please log in or register to do it.
How prehistoric and ancient cultures used art revealed in Hong Kong exhibition


Felix Lok Ching-nam looks right at home inside the “cave” in Hong Kong he is using to present a selection of items about prehistoric cultures and ancient civilisations.

Lok is the founder of Pulima, an online platform that trades in curiosities such as indigenous and folk art, books, and prints on ancient cultures that he has collected over the years.

In a perfect pairing, Pulima – which means “person with fine craftsmanship” in Paiwan, the language of Taiwan’s Paiwan indigenous group – is collaborating with an arts space and studio that resembles a cave, located in an industrial building in Kowloon’s San Po Kong neighbourhood.

Juen Juen Gung is designed that way because its founder, artist Vaevae Chan, set it up in 2019 as an escape after she struggled with grief and depression. She spent three years shaping the meditative space using polystyrene, fibreglass resin, ash and sand.
Juen Juen Gung was designed to resemble a cave by its founder, Vaevae Chan. Photo: Juen Juen Gung Cave
Juen Juen Gung was designed to resemble a cave by its founder, Vaevae Chan. Photo: Juen Juen Gung Cave

The result is an eerie space. The name Juen Juen Gung is derived from the Cantonese slang for “having a nose around”, and that is just what visitors are encouraged to do when they enter the “cave” which, in itself, is an experience.



Source link

How Much Does an Electric Car Cost in Singapore?
BREAKING: Italian government & Giorgio Meloni has made a move to chemically castrate convicted pedophiles and rapists. The left oppose it, claiming it\u2019s both racist and Islamophobic.