NOV 16 — 28, 2024
Tomorrow Maybe, 4/F Eaton HK
愛麗絲劇場實驗室「超現實主義劇場創作室」舉辦一系列活動,包括:體驗工作坊、演出、訓練工作坊,還有展覽和出版。
是次展覽我們邀請了香港知名漫畫家——利志達先生,以演出《他美得尤其像一架縫紉機和一把雨傘在解剖台上的偶遇》作為刺激,創作出一幅幅的漫畫作品,以獨特的筆鋒勾勒出一個瘋狂又充滿欲望的世界,一個人的内心世界。聯乘香港演藝學院舞台及製作藝術學院的兩位具潛質的學生進行展覽設計,打造出一所華麗暗黑的「聖堂」。
For the “Surrealism Theatre Creative Lab” project, Alice Theatre Laboratory organises a series of activities including an experiential workshop, performances, training workshops, as well as an exhibition and a publication.
For this exhibition, we invited the famous Hong Kong comic artist Li Chi-tak to create a comic based on our play “Les Chants de Maldoror”. He uses his unique artistic style to outline a crazy world filled with desire and a person’s inner world. Combining Li’s extraordinary comic and the exhibition design of two promising students from the Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts, we create a “church” that is both beautiful and dark.
27.09 - 09.10.2024
This event originated from the creators being invited by Ground Level Cinema. This year, the video exchange event was expanded to Hong Kong and Macau, allowing creators from the three places to have a video practice and collision. These works may be incomplete and do not have specific stories. The stage results of our exploration of images encourage ourselves to remain open and playful while remaining sensitive to life and images.
29.08 - 22.09.2024
Complementing the “Non Binary” Fashion Show, “Things We Never Did”, an exhibition by acclaimed Hong Kong photographer Mark Chung, curated by Kary Kwok (@karyphoto), will showcase powerful photographic documentation of the event. The exhibition will also feature select garments and props directly from the fashion show, providing attendees with an immersive, behind-the-scenes experience.
19 - 29.07.2024
Electro-Ceramic Universe is a city where ceramics, electronics, wireless sound waves, light waves, organic and inorganic matter, and human beings cohabit, intersect, and interact. Light artist Amy Chan and sound artist Kin Lam collaborated with the talented ceramists of St. James' Creation (SJC), an artistic creative platform for individuals with intellectual disabilities and autism spectrum disorder, to create this captivating installation. The satellite mini-cities consist of individually shaped ceramics embedded with devices such as radios, speakers, sensors, and lights, inviting the audience to interact and engage in an intimate experience of listening and lighting.
Part of unheard Sound and Music Festival 2024 @ Eaton HK
04 - 16.07.2024
Crip used to be under the name of “disabled (殘疾)” in the Chinese language. This exhibition sees a new possibility of reclaiming Crip in the context as ䷪ kyut3 (夬), the 43rd hexagram of I-Ching. Whereas 夬 bears a meaning of being damaged, ䷪ is the hexagram of breakthrough. 夬, a root of multiple Chinese characters – 決 玦 訣 抉 缺, generates diverse understandings and infinite potentials amongst imperfections.
Part of PRIDE 2024: Eclipsed Bodies, Embrace Pride @ Eaton HK
31.05 - 01.07.2024
Queer and disabled individuals often find themselves born into families where they are the only ones with their particular identity or condition. These differences can lead to a divergence in self-understanding and worldview, creating emotional distance between them and their parents and siblings. The exhibition seeks to illuminate the experiences and challenges faced by queer and disabled families in Hong Kong, the United States, and France, within the context of their biological families.
Part of PRIDE 2024: Eclipsed Bodies, Embrace Pride @ Eaton HK
26.03 - 28.04.2024
"After Human: Marks of the Beasts" explores storytelling as a tool for marking the significant impact of humans on animals. It sheds light on the ideas and figures of animals as an integral part of East Asian cultures, where the ideologies and cosmologies behind them often remain hidden.
23.12.2023 - 28.01.2024
July Weber continue their research around performing for and with non-human entities - focus on confronting(dancing) with our fears, through establishing and switching between different "fear-characters", develop a sort of somatic schizophrenia and investigate into possible therapeutic and creative aspects of a physical dialogue with our fears. July is also collaborating with musician Makita in constructing a performative album of electronic soundscapes for different summoned fears.
July Weber is the artist in residence of Eaton HK's Consciousness Festival.
12.10 - 31.10.2023
Comprised of both still and moving imagery, this exhibition tells stories of the sensual and sensuous nature of queer love and queer life, from wavy, hazy disco-dance-floors to soft, gentle embraces of lovers and friends holding hands and holding space for one another. Viewers can experience life in Naarm (Melbourne) through the eyes of the artist and consider how we value intimacy in our everyday lives.
This is one of the Satellite Exhibitions of Hong Kong International Photo Festival 2023.
13.09 - 06.10.2023
(RE)PLAY examines the archival strategies, considerations, and formats of two seminal artists working across the valencies of performance-making.
Melati Suryodarmo and Xavier Le Roy present lecture performance UNPACKED No. 1: Love (2023) and Product of Other Circumstances (2009) resepctively – drawing on the ‘Jumping Frames 2023’ themes of re-enactment and archival (re)construction. Emphasising their methodologies in archiving works, the audience is invited to re-imagine scenes and essences of their practice through objects, videos and still images.
13.08 - 03.09.2023
Taking humour as a point of departure, the exhibition looks into the why’s and how’s of memetic irony: why do these devices share an affinity among Gen Z, and how are these memes—in Dawkins’ terms and in a contemporary vernacular—disseminated? In the era where ironic expression is nearly indistinguishable from sincere belief, meme makers conflate ‘based’ with ‘cringe’, readers take comedic scripts as half-truths. The virtual versus actual has become obsolete. So have art and memes that slowly morph into one another.
08.07 - 06.08.2023
Two Readings: Duo-solo exhibition by A.3.Lingo and Sunday Lai bring together dual artistic practices that interpret the signs in our world. By reading coincidence as signal and narrative, the 2 artists make magic with the material offered by Hong Kong
03.06 - 02.07.2023
Law Yuk Mui introspects into her memories of waterbodies, to an exponential speculation of the cosmology, informed by the observation and surveying of the stars above our heads and the land we stand on. Based on her previous works with field research on New Territories rural, Law re-enacts a raining ritual to revisit the Hong Kong water crisis in 1963, and unfolds tales of stellar worship in ancient China.
19.03 - 30.04.2023
Feature a cross-section of works produced between 2017 and present, New Pessimism: Tropical frontier reflects Natasha Tontey & Riar Rizaldi’s ongoing commitment to exploring the aesthetic of refusal, the campiness of social dilemma, and the horror imagery of social ecology in the tropical frontier.
11 - 26.02.2023
FutureTense, a non-profit making platform aims to foster collaborations and intellectual exchange in new media arts. The exhibition showcase award-winning and selected works from entries across Asia, including Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, China, and Hong Kong.
26.01 - 01.02.2023
THEN / NOW features 25 photos shot on 35mm at 1995's Alternative Miss World Competition in London where Kary puts the audience in the subject and looks at how they use "outfits' ' as a form of unique expression. The project explores how music, art and fashion can be imaginative tools to address political and social issues under the then Margaret Thatcher regime - a time when fantasy, love and clubbing provided escapism to the throbbing underlying social issues that Britain was facing.
03.12.2022 - 15.01.2023
Based on the contents of SAMPLE’s ISSUE 27 “E pur si muove” and ISSUE 28 “Terra Forma”, artists Lazarus Chan Long Fung, Winnie Yan Wai Yin, Tang Kwong San, and Wong Winsome Dumalagan were invited to visit Hong Kong’s Port Island with a geologist, then create new artworks under the theme of GROUNDING, imagining the generation and transformation of the land.
Presented by SAMPLE Magazine
01.09 - 02.10.2022
In a collective contemplation to re-organize embodied memories and body order, the inherited system and independence between bodies, subjectivities, politics, place, and movement, what emerges through the works in this collection proposes a certain engagement to access possible unfamiliar flow in which our body's own reaction and participation gives shape to the experience.
Co-presented with City Contemporary Dance Company
22 - 24.07.2022
Encompass diverse forms of performances, including participatory art, endurance art, lecture performance, performative installation, 3-days live art showcase 'Fluidity and Impermanence' investigates the action of artists as artistic expression and engage audience participation in the creative process.
Co-presented with Per.Platform.
20.05 - 17.07.2022
Luke Casey’s solo exhibition, SPECTERS depicts a hallucinative, uncanny journey traversing the universes of nature, spirituality, and technology through photography and video artworks. The audience is invited to float in and out of worlds built by Casey, immerse themselves in the frontier of the imaginary, the reality and its hybrid, constantly shifting in between.
18.12.2021 - 06.02.2022
No Kids Allowed plays out as an irony in which we invite local young creatives to trespass and occupy the spaces in society where they are rejected to get in. Together, they transgress the expectations society uses to box them in. Tomorrow Maybe transforms into an experimental playground for emerging artists to embody their artistic visions.
30.09 - 31.10.2021
The exhibition “Expanded Space” relates to the concept of “Expanded Cinema”. By opening up and re-examining the framework of cinematic screening, we hope to explore new possibilities and potentialities to extend our moving image programme, not limiting to cinema presentation, providing a new sensory experience for the audience.
12.06 - 29.08.2021
With every inhale and exhale we are in an expanding and contracting relationship with our planet. The quality of the air, the way we breathe, and who can and cannot breathe have all became prescient questions in 2020.
This exhibition is about humans, trees, and the breath that connects us;
Through the work of 11 artists/collectives, the exhibition raises and explores the topic and contemplates the human relationship to what we consider “our natural environment”.
17.04 - 23.05.2021
Throughout their residency at Eaton, the group relinquish their own practice and adopt each other’s ways of observation, ideation and creation, hence imagine themselves as travelers exploring strange land with a foreign scope.
In the exhibition, ‘object’ is the incognito protagonist emerging from the mundane everyday scenario, they speak loudly to reveal the alienated aspects of the surrounding neighborhood, to act as the mediator of the ‘situations’ we engaged in. The artworks form a network of object, each of them complements the others, opening up a space for continuation of the fragmentized narrative embedded.
06.02 - 21.03.2021
We evaluate our world based on results, but we often fail to see the movements comprising each action that create these results. Movements are transitory and ephemeral, lost in time and always progressing. The movement never really ends.
This new series of work entitled Manifest Ephemeral by Ophelia Jacarini captures movements; suspending choreography and dance into sculptural installation and photography.
12.09 - 12.10.2020
Lean’s photographs bare the innocence of a teenager but the distance and awareness of someone with far more lived years. One is drawn into the childlike world created by the artist, a world soft to the touch and tender, balanced with curiosity and honesty that embraces and upholds the spaces, objects and people she captures. While her works are polished, and the worlds inhabited seem pristine, Lean’s subjects are not immune to emotional and physical pain. What she shows is the resilience they embody as life gently leaves its imprints.
20.06 - 23.08.2020
Greek philosopher Heraclitus had a famous analogy about life: "You cannot step twice into the same river". Time cannot travel backward, everything is always in a state of becoming. The only certainty is change, as such each moment is unique. During the process of making animation, with the help of software and tools, characters can flow fluidly back and forth in time, as though existing beyond time itself. Travelling between dimensions, pasts and futures and grabbing hold of the most precious moments, the ending has always already been drawn out for the animation characters. In “reality” we are unable to see the future and there is no way of reading the script of our lives. We are part of the current of time. There is a feeling that our destiny, unfinished, is still to be written.
Is this true? Are our destinies still to be written out? Or do we live in this illusion?
23.01 - 03.03.2020
Lo Lai Lai Natalie's solo exhibition “Give no words but mum,” featuring her moving image and installation works of the past two years that portray her inexplicably dependent relationship with plants. The most recent works include a personal private underground TV station “Slow-so TV: Give no words but mum” that continues to serve distracted audiences and provides them with programs to pass the time. Thoughts, uprooted together with the plants from the earth, the fine debris serenely scattered about, calmly reveal long-suppressed desires and obsessions.⠀
19.10 - 24.11.2019
South Korean-born German philosopher Byung-Chul Han quoted an example to explain Giorgio Agamben’s concept of ‘profanation’: During the recession period in Greece, a group of children discovered a large amount of banknotes in a ruined house. Instead of using them in the way money is supposed to be used, they started playing with it, tearing it to shreds. Profanation is an act of taking sacred things and turning them into mortal usage. By quoting this example, Han portrays a post-apocalyptic world where money has lost its meaning, and we are shredding paper for fun, like the act of ‘profanation’ by the children.
23.08 - 22.09.2019
Gummy candies are soft, gelatin-based chewable sweets. Gummies has a high water content, are available in a wide variety of flavors, and its shape, size, texture are easily manipulable depending on one’s desire and needs. Due to its high sugar content, gummy candies are very high in energy (a.k.a. calories).
By using the colorful and shape-shifting gummies as the point of entry, their works explore themes such as artificial bodies, beauty, corporeal desire, resistance, fluidity, and flexibility.
Curated by KY Wong with artists Alysa Chan, Chan Ka Kiu Clair, Cheng Ting Ting, Ho Sin Tung, Irving Cheung, Tsang Ching Sadako, Yu Shuk Pui Bobby
13.07 - 18.08.2019
The multi-component show includes new sculptural, sonic, architectural, and two-dimensional work. It continues Ho’s investigation into the perils and potentials of transnationalism. The topic resonates with the artist, who since 2016 has with greater frequency returned to Hong Kong after living and working in the States for several decades. The exhibition draws reference from political histories, transnational desires and infrastructures that mediate our travel, both consciously and unconsciously experienced.
13.05 - 30.06.2019
Being good means acting the same perfect way — but there are so many ways to be bad. Creativity and genius can be bad. Fluidity and queerness can be bad. Enjoyment and exuberance can be bad. For Father and Mother, even autonomy and independence can be bad.
Society normalizes our bodies to make sure we are good. We’d rather take flight in being bad. Just as the mechanisms of life have evolved by hacking our genetics with bad copies, we will use our bad bodies to hack the hegemonic systems of patriarchy, hetero-, and homo-normativity.
Curated by Nick Yu with artists Ip Wai Lung, Samak Kosem, Isaac Chong Wai, Mary Maggic, Rob Crosse, and Eisa Jocson
22.03 - 05.05.2019
Fragrant Little Haven takes a description from Geoffrey Robley Sayer. Hong Kong, means fragrant harbour in Chinese, was only a name of a village at the south of Hong Kong Island before the English came. It was a harbour for transporting the luxury Aquilaria sinensis trees, which produces agarwood, a valuable fragrant wood used for incense and medicine. One and half centuries have past, the artist found out that at least 180 streets in Hong Kong were named after plants.
04.03 - 13.03.2019
As a photographer, Siu Wai Hang’s practice explores the fundamentals of the medium of photography, while creating social and historical commentary. In this intimate show, Tomorrow Maybe provided an entry point into the artist’s ongoing examination into the medium particularly with time, as experienced, as perceived, both subjectively and collectively, and represented through form.
01.02.2019
The exhibition includes notes from Zheng Mahler current research on a virtual history of opium in South East Asia, and transcripts from a forthcoming publication on psychedelics and technology catalysed during their residency at Eaton HK. Taking its cue from Thomas De Quincey’s 1821 text, ‘Confessions of an English Opium Eater,’ the virtual reality experience transports the viewer into a phantasmagoric ‘opium dream’ through various moment’s in the history of opium.
Tomorrow Maybe
4/F Eaton HK, 380 Nathan Road, Jordan, Hong Kong
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