ART JAMMING 畫畫兼開P 隨時變另類單身party 蘋果日報 20140823
Let's have fun in Choco L'ART Studio!
Hong Kong - Chocolate Factory, Landmark Atrium.
This Christmas, the LANDMARK mall is transforming their LANDMARK ATRIUM into a wondrous chocolate factory called Cocoaland. The fantastical factory will be composed of several magical areas and will be populated with adorable Cocoa Monsters illustrated by a French artist: Frédéric Pillot.
At the 'Cocoa Forest,’ the monsters collect cocoa beans to make chocolate, and every 30 minutes the chocolate-making machines will burst into life emitting a cascade of imaginative sounds and lights! Watch as the chocolate flows through the ‘Chocolate Tower’ to the ‘Power Pumps’ and down into the ‘Shaping Machine.’ For a little art, the ‘Colouring Studio,’ paints the chocolates in a bright hue as the ‘Decorating Tower’ puffs ‘steam’ and flashy lights. Finally, the 'Packaging Machine' organizes the newly made chocolates into beautiful little gift boxes.
Bring your nieces, nephews, & kids! They can have their turn at turning a wheel to activate the 'Drying Fan' and can also race to stop the ‘Greedy Monsters’ from stealing all the chocolate. Because Christmas is a season of giving, Landmark has created the 'Joy Machine' where you can donate HK$20 towards 'Make a Wish' and play some mini-games!
Explore the Hong Kong arts scene with Kristopher Ho
Hong Kong illustrator Kristopher Ho goes on a journey through four diverse art and culture spots in the city to explore what makes Hong Kong unique.
HOW TO SEE | The Grandmaster of Kung Fu Films: Lau Kar-leung
What makes a true kung fu film? Many directors and actors have been associated with the kung fu genre, Hong Kong cinema’s most unique creation, but no one compares to Lau Kar-leung (1937–2013) as a purist of the genre and the kung fu form.
Associate curator La Frances Hui explores the history of the kung fu films, the actors and filmmakers associated with the genre like Bruce Lee, Gordon Liu, and Jackie Chan, and why Lau Kar-leung has been hailed as the grandmaster of kung fu films.
Learn more about Lau Kar-leung and get tickets to MoMA's film series The Grandmaster: Lau Kar-leung (July 5-17)
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The comments and opinions expressed in this video are those of the speaker alone, and do not represent the views of The Museum of Modern Art, its personnel, or any artist.
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武俠
功夫
劉家良
黃飛鴻
少林三十六房
成龍
李小龍
邵氏
武術
Travel to Hong Kong with Blur: a Local Illustrator’s Dream
Blur fans can travel to Hong Kong with the veteran Britpop band, with the help of Hong Kong comic-book artist KongKee. The illustrator was asked to create a comic book on how the band’s first album in 12 years was inspired by the city.
Website:
Japanese artist Yoshitomo Nara: I'm still trying to figure out the meaning of life
Japanese artist Yoshitomo Nara launched his first solo exhibition Life Is Only One in Hong Kong. The 55-year-old said frankly that he is still trying to figure out the meaning of life. Watch more videos, go to
Chocolate painting Miele Shenzhen China 2016
Chocolate Art 3x3m .
2am edible art series.
Shenzhen China
Picturing Hong Kong: Ink Paintings by Contemporary Hong Kong Artists : Guided Tour
This exhibition Picturing Hong Kong: Ink Paintings by Contemporary Hong Kong Artists features five representative Hong Kong artists: Hau Kwei Wong, Raymond Fung Wing-kee, Wai Bong Koon, Joey Leung Ka-yin, and Barbara Choi Tak-yee, bringing together their ink paintings of Hong Kong scenery.
Date: September 14, 2017 (Thursday)
Time: 16:15 - 17:15
A Journey Through Asian Contemporary Art: Chinese and Japanese Artists
Asian 20th Century & Contemporary Art specialist Marcello Kwan discusses the unique creative approaches and sophisticated forms of expression of leading Chinese and Japanese artists Liu Ye, Zeng Fanzhi, Liu Wei and Nara Yoshitomo, and explain the significance and depth of meaning of their works.
Traditional Hong Kong Pastries in Singapore | Leung Sang Hong Kong Pastries
(sorry for bad audio lol)
Visit the shop here:
LEUNG SANG HONG KONG PASTRIES
Blk 18, Jln Membina, #01-06, Singapore 164018
(Opposite Tiong Bahru Plaza)
Tiong Bahru MRT, Exit A
20 Trengganu Street (Smith Street)
01-01 G2 Singapore 058479
Tel: 6271 6056
Video on traditional Hong Kong Pastry making and process, and what it's like in the kitchen.
Trending China: Kam Mak, a stamp designer
Kam Mak, born in Hong Kong, is an artist and illustrator who has been designing the Lunar New Year #Stamp for the U.S. Postal Service for over a decade.
❤•´ *`•.❤¸Long Distance - Janice Wei❤•´ *`•.❤¸
Janice Wei
Long Distance lyrics
When I'm feeling blue
Lost without a clue
Sparks between our eyes
Nothing can be as true
Sing my life for you
Paintings that I drew
One plus one makes two
How I wish to caress you
Tell me where we heading to
What we do may seem so crude
Where's the good in our goodbyes
The time you leave is the time
You break my heart in two
[Chorus:]
Even though we're far apart
Send my love with all my heart
When you miss me at night
Look at the stars shining bright
For the times you pushed me through
All the things I do for you
Running tears from my eyes
Thinking how will I survive
Next goodbye
(Repeat from top)
(Chorus x2)
Oooooooooh
Goodbye...
Janice Wei
This is the profile page on the Chinese Actress.
Name: Janice Wei 衛蘭
Place of Birth: Hong Kong
DOB: April 13, 1982
Height: 53
Weight: 110 lbs
Nationality: Chinese/Korean/Phillippino
Family members: mom, dad, and little sister
education level: high school
Languages: english, cantonese, mandarin
Interests: singing, dancing, listening to music, sports (badminton), movies, travel
Favourite type of Music: R&B, jazz, blues, funk-soul, punk-rock, ska-punk, acid-jazz
Favourite type of books: conceptual arts, contemporary arts, greek mythology, folklore
How she was discovered: Janice Wei was discovered by Mark Lui, and promoted to go to East Asia Records. He worked with Leon Lai and chose a couple of his old songs, composed a new music for it and together with Janice's unique voice, the songs were re-created in a new style for the audience.
Before becoming an artist herself, Janice Wei Lan had always enjoyed singing. Her voice came to the attention of renowned producer Mark Lui by chance when she recorded the backing vocals for one of mega star Leon Lai's songs in 2004. Janice obviously left a favourable impression on Lui, as upon Lui's stumbling across her voice he informed Leon, who in turn decided to offer Janice a contract with AMusic (東亞), a newly-formed record label where both Leon Lai and Mark Lui were major investors (Leon transferred himself to Amusic as well). As a result Janice became the first newcomer to sign for AMusic in 2004.
Janice M. Vidal (Chinese: 衛蘭) is a female singer in Hong Kong. She is of mixed parentage with a Filipino father and a mixed Chinese and Korean mother. As a Hong Kong singer she had chosen the Chinese name Wei Lan (衛蘭), although most of her fans refer to her simply as Janice. In the past she went under the name Renee in her musical work prior to her debut album in 2005 and Ming Lok Tai (明樂蒂) in a EEG singing competition in 2000. As of 2006, her father resides in Hong Kong, while her mother resides in South Korea.
Janice is emerging as one of the new singers in Hong Kong and Asia. Her music style is a mixture of Cantopop, Jazz and R&B. She performs her songs in English, Cantonese and Mandarin and will be performing songs in Korean in the near future.
Janice's twin sister Jill Vidal (衛詩) is also a singer. Jill was signed by the same record label as Janice at the end of 2005 and released her first song in December of 2005. Even though their voices sound virtually the same, Jill has a notably different style from Janice; her songs tend to be more hard-core R&B and are also more fast-paced, while Janice has a heavier Pop feel to her songs. In an interview on Sina, Charles Ying stated that Cantonese is not Janice's first language and asked how Janice dealt with this difficulty. Janice admitted that she does not read Chinese but uses English to help her pronounce words that she sings in the recording studio, however she replied that she is quicker at recognising Chinese characters. Janice will be holding her first concert in Hong Kong on the 29th March 2007. It is called My First Concert
Creation of a Masterpiece 曠世傑作的誕生 | The Peninsula Hong Kong 香港半島酒店
Renowned Hong Kong artist, Mr Lee Chi Ching, rendered The Peninsula Hong Kong's 85 years of glorious history in a 3500mm x 800mm ink painting. With the assistance of the Hong Kong Arts Centre and Public Art Hong Kong, Lee has charted the shared legacy of Asia's Grande Dame and her beloved Hong Kong, using a combination of traditional Chinese ink painting and techniques from the Western school. It took the artist four months to plan the framework for this masterpiece, with the final artwork meticulously painted in just three weeks. This video charts the creative evolution of Lee's commemorative masterwork.
香港著名畫家李志清先生以妙筆於長3.5米、高0.8米的畫紙上勾畫出香港半島酒店的輝煌傳奇。今次得藝術伙伴: 香港藝術中心及香港公共藝術機構之助,李先生以中國傳統水墨畫的技法融合西方藝術的風格,勾畫出遠東貴婦85年歷史,並向與酒店結下不解緣的東方之珠與香港人致意。
李先生合共花了四個月時間設計水墨動畫的藍圖,而這幅曠世傑作則耗用了三星期完成。
The Works:HK Int'l Performance Art Festival, 7-Paperholic @North Point, Qi Baishi & Shi Lu's works
What exactly is performance art? It’s a form that tends to take performance away from theatre and auditoriums, and that often – although not always - takes the art out of the art gallery. But maybe the difficulty of defining it is the point: it challenges orthodox art forms and cultural norms. It can range from Joseh Beuys sharing a room with a coyote for several hours, to the wince-inducing sadomacohistc self torture of Bob Flanagan. It’s often site-specific, conceptual, and a direct experience between the audience and the performer. Many performance artists use their bodies as their main tool, and it’s often a vehicle for political statement when many other forms of expression are more controlled. It became particularly popular in the 1990s in Eastern European countries formerly repressed by the Soviet Union. Last month, the Hong Kong International Performance Art Festival invited artists from Poland and Hungary to share their experiences and also to perform on our streets.
Also taking to the streets of Hong Kong for inspiration, although in quite a different way, are the artists involved in an ongoing community-based project based on printing. Seven local artists from different backgrounds are using paper to document the old neighbourhood of North Point. The artists involved in “7 paperholic” all make the most of the many different possibilities of paper. Workshops accompanying the exhibition include sketching on the street on lithographic plates, print-making and paper-making.
The intertwined traditions of chinese ink painting and calligraphy date back at least 2,000 years. Art historian and critic Xie He defined many of the rules and forms in his Six principles of Chinese painting in the 5th century AD. The traditions are strong and longstanding, but – in the 20th century – artists like Qi Baishi and Shi Lu both departed from, and carried on a dialogue with, those traditions. At the Sun Museum until early July, the exhibition “Eternity Revolving Twin Rocks” showcases more than 40 works by these two masters of ink, each of whom took the traditional forms into a new and personal direction.
There’s no doubt that Hong Kong is gaining an ever-higher profile as a performance venue for musicians from all over the world. Some pass through from one day to the next, even if they do come back from time to time. Others, to our great good fortune, decide to stay. One of those longer-term stayers is Scottish singer-songwriter Laura Kenny. She’s with us in the studio right now, talking to Ben Tse.
Chen Hang Feng: Logomania
Mixing and manipulating corporate logos and traditional Chinese symbols, Shanghai-based artist Chen Hang Feng makes intricate paper cutouts that riff on both the era of mega-businesses and his own ancient heritage. This video visits Feng in his studio and accompanies him on a paper-finding walk while he talks about his work, his teacher and materials.
Roy Lichtenstein: Reflections - trailer
This film features Roy Lichtenstein, one of the great pop artists of our time, discussing his work, his artistic process, and the sources of his inspiration.
For the full film:
Vimeo:
Amazon:
DVD:
Kung Fu Tea Experience
In this episode, Ben is joined in the studio by Helen Liu and Chen Bowen from Wall Street Chinese. Mr. Chen is the President of the American Daoism Association and also a tea master. Mr. Chen demonstrates the art of Kung Fu tea in the studio. This type of tea making is a speciality of people from Chaozhou in Southern China, and also popular in Hong Kong.
Check out Wall St Chinese's Website at:
Now-TV Clip with chocolate artist Gerhard Petzl in Hong Kong
(Chinese Original with English) Royal feast chocolate table for luxury shopping mall Harbour City in Hong Kong (Gallery at the Harbour) by Austrian Master Chocolatier Gerhard Petzl
HongKong Disney Land, Art of Animation, showing you how animation work
with real model of Toy Story characters, Woody, Buzz Light Year, Tracy, Bullseye, and Alient, and using a strobe lamp with freq 1/25 sec, you will see all toys running around~ enjoy~
Ceet Elephant parade Hong Kong
Ceet in his studio