True Likeness: The Art and Collection of Jingguanlou

Overview

  • Date
    From 2024.3.22
  • Venue
    Jingguanlou Gallery, 4/F
  • Fee
    Free

Like many 20th century Chinese artists who navigated between realism and abstraction, Dr Leo Wong Kwai-kuen, the master of Jingguanlou, aspires to create his photographic works by embracing the Chinese artistic ideal of “taking the likeness in unlikeness as true likeness”. Photography garnered for him trophies in the form of international awards. Suspecting a block to his creativity, Dr Wong took a 10-year hiatus from photography and turned to Chinese arts for inspiration. This set him collecting works of Chinese painting and calligraphy ever since. He kept making breakthroughs since the 1990s, successfully transcending naturalistic pictures to become spiritual imageries. The exhibition includes a selection of Dr Wong’s photographic works in correlation with the paintings and calligraphies from the Jingguanlou Collection. It aims to showcase how the collector-photographer pictured the intrinsic for both his collecting and photographing endeavours.

This exhibition is made possible by “Wu Guanzhong Art Sponsorship: Dialogue with 20th Century Chinese Art Series”. The Sponsorship is dedicated to promoting the art of Wu Guanzhong and the 20th century China. Through a diversity of programmes, the Museum endeavours to showcase the innovation and evolution of the 20th century Chinese art, and aspires to offer a fresh perspective on this significant period.

The Museum invited Hong Kong artist Olivier Cong to create the music project, Diary 23, which draws inspiration from the period when Dr Wong took a 10-year hiatus from photography and turned towards Chinese arts for aesthetic nourishment. Through a series of music and images, Diary 23 serves as a response to Dr Wong’s transformative artistic journey, capturing moments of transition and introspection.

The exhibition is also one of the activities in the Chinese Culture Promotion Series. The LCSD has all along promoted Chinese history and culture through organising an array of programmes and activities to enable the public learn more about broad and profound Chinese culture. For more information, please visit www.lcsd.gov.hk/en/ccpo/index.html.