Web Content Display
Web Content Display
Web Content Display
Web Content Display
Presented by : Leisure and Cultural Services Department
Organised by : Art Promotion Office
Design Partner : Howard Cheng
The
word
‘souvenir'
is
taken
directly
from
the
French
for
‘to
remember'.
When
we
travel
to
foreign
lands,
we
tend
to
acquire
keepsakes
as
a
remembrance
or
token
of
our
visit.
There
are
countless
souvenir
items:
some
people
like
to
collect
matchboxes,
scenic
postcards
or
keychains
and
magnets
with
depictions
of
famous
landmarks,
others
prefer
to
buy
more
authentic
items
that
aren't
sold
by
tourist
and
gift
shops.
Featuring
two
local
artists,
Carol
Lee
Mei-kuen
and
Trevor
Yeung,
the
exhibition
shows
their
unique
travelogue
of
gleanings.
Working
in
different
media,
Lee
and
Yeung
both
take
inspiration
from
a
wide
variety
of
exotic
plant
gathered
during
their
travels
and
re-express
them
in
personalised
artistic
forms.
Involving
botanic
observations
and
discoveries
of
natural
origins,
the
transformation
process
creates
new
artistic
idioms
and
opens
up
a
universal
panorama.
Carol
Lee
Mei-kuen
likes
to
visit
historical
destinations
where
she
can
trace
the
provenance
of
culture
and
observe
the
natural
sequence
of
events.
Picking
wild
plants
along
the
way,
she
presses
them
to
retain
their
shapes
in
a
‘frozen'
frame
of
time.
When
put
together,
the
seemingly
insignificant
elements
form
an
emblem
of
foreign
lands.
Trevor
Yeung,
in
contrast,
gathers
different
plant
species
from
around
the
world.
Through
horticulture
and
installations,
he
juxtaposes
the
relationship
between
natural
landscapes
and
cultural
ecology,
while
slowly
exposing
the
growth
patterns
of
the
plants
under
photosynthesis.
The
geographical
differences
between
various
species
are
thus
blurred,
giving
rise
to
an
unusual
bonsai
art
that
resembles
a
miniature
urban
greenhouse.
For details, please visit our website and follow ‘Arttravellers' Facebook page and Instagram.
Exhibition
Period
:
7.9.2018
—
23.3.2019
Venue
:
1/F
Lobby,
Trade
and
Industry
Tower
(3
Concorde
Road,
Kowloon)
Opening
hours
:
Monday
to
Friday
:
9am
—
6pm
Saturday
:
9am
—
2pm
Closed
on
Sundays
and
Public
Holidays
Free
admission
Download
Here:
Exhibition
Booklet
(14.4MB)
Web Content Display
Exhibition Highlights