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In February and March 2023, the media arts festival SerendiCity offers an exciting series of free, avant-garde multisensory experiences – many specially commissioned for specific sites around the district.
Taking place indoors and outdoors – in the Art Park, the Xiqu Centre and on various online platforms – the festival includes large-scale immersive experiential installations, interactive art, performances, games and a web series that open up thought-provoking new perspectives on technology, art and urban lifestyles.
For three consecutive weeks, see the night skies above the Great Lawn of the Art Park transformed by Borealis, a vibrant recreation of the Northern Lights by Swiss artist Dan Acher. Nearby, Berlin-based artist Robert Seidel’s Petrichor reshapes the Dry Riverbed with a luminous digital landscape that immerses visitors in an alternative world of hybrid digital flora and artificial mist. At the Xiqu Centre, acclaimed artist Rafael Lozano-Hemmer’s Biometric Theatre presents a series of audience-centred interactive installations, including a suspended landscape of light bulbs that pulsates to the rhythm of visitor heartbeats.
Other programmes include Chilai Howard’s The Orchestra of Temple Street – a realtime, generative online artwork driven by on-site visitor experiences of the Temple Street neighbourhood and accessed via a mobile app, a lecture performance series presented by international media artists, and much more. Full programme details to be announced early February 2023.
SerendiCity is curated by Kyle Chung, a Hong Kong curator whose work explores the dynamics between technologies, materiality and human agency. It is the final event in our
Creative Tomorrow season, exclusively sponsored by The Hong Kong Jockey Club.
Date | Programme | Venue |
---|---|---|
13 February–5 March 2023 | Dan Acher – Borealis | Art Park |
13 February–5 March 2023 | Robert Seidel – Petrichor | Art Park |
13 February–5 March 2023 | Lukas Truniger – Distributive Intelligence | A Group Mind | Xiqu Centre |
13 February–5 March 2023 | Rafael Lozano-Hemmer – Biometric Theatre | Xiqu Centre |
27 February–1 March 2023 | Enoch Cheng – Remembering the Red Chamber | Xiqu Centre |
13 February–5 March 2023 | Team 9 x Milo Tse – “Word Game” Special Edition ‘A Practical Poet’ | Xiqu Centre |
13 February–5 March 2023 | Chilai Howard – The Orchestra of Temple Street | Online |
13 February–5 March 2023 | Vvzela Kook – A Village Idyll on a Radioactive Field | Online |
17 February–5 March 2023 | Mak2 – Hong Kong’s Next Top Artist | Online |
2–3 March 2023 | Lecture Performances | Xiqu Centre |
SerendiCity is part of "Creative Tomorrow" exclusively sponsored by
The Hong Kong Jockey Club.
Exclusive Sponsor:
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Data permeates contemporary society. It is used to standardise every aspect of the urban lifestyle. Especially within the neo-liberal capitalist society, standardisation is prioritised for maximised productivity and minimised cost. The price is creativity. As this dynamic between data and urbanity persists, how do we imagine a more diverse, intimate and holistic relationship with data in the vision of a post-urban city? The media arts festival SerendiCity, presented as part of the Creative Tomorrow season speculates on the idea of an alternative urbanity. Through public art installations, media arts exhibitions, locative media art, game art, experimental performance, a web series and lecture performances, the programme envisions the city’s nature, landscape and narrative in the post-urban context.
Post-urban nature
Data streamlines urban nature. Urban green spaces are highly controlled in land use regulations; parks are designed and groomed; each tree in each park is logged as data in schematic drawings. While the purpose of parks is to bring nature into the city, data works to restrain the organic aspect of nature from our urban experience. In the post-urban vision, what role can data play in enhancing, instead of restricting, the organic in urban nature, to create a synthesis of the natural and the artificial?
Imitating the northern lights in the subtropical sky of Hong Kong, the laser projection installation Borealis by Dan Acher emerges above the Great Lawn of the Art Park. The work provokes a communal fascination towards the natural phenomenon misplaced between the city’s skyscrapers.
On the other side of the Art Park, the newly created site-specific environmental installation Petrichor by Robert Seidel paints with the scenery of trees, rocks, wind and fog by projecting experimental animations of Hong Kong-inspired urban structures. The organic attribute of the park is amplified into layers of natural and digital materials in motion.
Post-urban landscape
Data streamlines the urban space. We encounter the cityscape through interfaces of web mapping and online listings on Google Maps and OpenRice. Efficient, yet inhuman. How can a post-urban vision provide more intimate interfaces that not only inform our urban experience, but also embed our human presence into the data we see?
In Rafael Lozano-Hemmer’s solo media art exhibition Biometric Theatre, large-scale interactive artworks capture and embody the audience’s biological signature, such as fingerprints, body temperature and heartbeats, into poetic contemporary human portraits. The critical playfulness and connectivity in these sentient artworks reimagine the role of the body between our digital and lived realities.
The kinetic light installation Distributive intelligence | A group mind by Lukas Truniger presents a cluster of LED robots with sensors reactive to the micro-changes of light conditions from their surrounding environment as well as each other. Mimicking collective and individual behaviours with artificial intelligence, the installation creates a pseudo-societal space in which the presence of both the audience and the robots is signified in their mutual interaction through light.
In the web-based locative media artwork The Orchestra of Temple Street, Chilai Howard applies GPS data to present location-specific camera filters in various sections of Temple Street in Hong Kong. As the on-site audience experiences the diverse cultures of Temple Street through the digital lens, the web application also crowdsources GPS data from the audience, and transforms it into experimental music composed of community-inspired sound elements. The musical representation of the audience’s collective experience in the neighbourhood is generated in real-time as a hyper-dramatised, audio-videographic cityscape online.
Post-urban narrative
Data streamlines urban stories. The polarising algorithm of social media feeds on the attention economy. To sustain our interest for ad sales, social media filters out anything unfamiliar that does not capture our immediate attention, presenting a narrative of urbanity we are already used to and comfortable with. In the post-urban vision, how can we reimagine the consumption of data about urban stories that matches the complexity of our urban experience?
Addressing psychology and tradition, Remembering the Red Chamber directed by Enoch Cheng is an experimental performance that illustrates conventional Chinese opera water sleeve gestures and movement, as well as the emotional states embedded within them. Applying motion data to digital animations as well as physical Chinese opera costumes, it reveals the mental wellbeing of iconic characters from the classic tale Dream of the Red Chamber. Integrating new tools for storytelling in the process of dissecting the fundamentals, the performance explores potential future forms of traditional Chinese opera.
The web-based game art A Village Idyll on a Radioactive Field by Vvzela Kook invites the player to traverse an abstract landscape as a resident in a village that initially appears peaceful but soon reveals an underlying threat. As the role-playing platform game unfolds, the latent danger of nuclear contamination and disinformation is exposed, causing the player to experience feelings of fear, deception, urgency and hopelessness.
The art game Word Game by independent game studio Team9 is a puzzle role-playing game with a focus on the digital materiality of text and language, that invites the player to assume the role of the protagonist “I”, and navigate through a virtual world entirely made of Chinese characters. Using the same game mechanics, Hong Kong poet Milo Tse was commissioned to create the interactive poetry artwork A Practical Poet, which situates the player in the life of a poet facing misconceptions and prejudice against their profession in the world of words.
Created during a three-month artist residency, Mak2’s web series Hong Kong’s Next Top Artist, critiques the contemporary art market from an artist’s perspective. Satirical and semi-scripted, the web series takes the form of a makeover reality show in which Mak2 works to shape a fellow artist’s career according to what is considered marketable by commercial galleries, delving into issues such as the artist-gallerist relationship, gender inequality, institutional bias and the various intrinsic and commercial values of artworks and artists.
To further contextualise the intricate urban stories we experience through data and beyond, we have also curated two Lecture Performances with artists Eugenia Kim and Erica Scourti. In the first, inspired by her chronic physical pain, Kim generates the machine perception of the body from human somatic movements and the traditional Korean dance for expelling spirits, known as Salpuri. In the second, Scourti uses the personal archive of audio and visual materials on her phone to explore the contemporary meanings of voice, as well as its mistranslation and miscommunication across languages and media.
SerendiCity speculates on our encounters with data in the post-urban vision, not as a comprehensive proposal, but to challenge common perceptions. Apart from the technological advancements, the innovations in these works lie primarily in the artistic applications of their media. It is this creative approach that works to reveal an alternative dynamic between data and urbanity. In the heart of the city, at a time of art tech frenzy, SerendiCity at West Kowloon Cultural District offers the time and place for the audience to reflect, fantasise and recalibrate their relationship with data.
Kyle Chung
Curator
Photo: Abdela Igmirien
Kyle Chung is a curator and researcher whose recent exhibitions explore the dynamics between technologies, materiality and human agency. Selected exhibitions include Ellen Pau: Time After Time Will Tell at 1961, Singapore; #YOU #ME #ourSELFIES at Hong Kong Visual Arts Centre; One World Exposition 2.1: #like4like at chi K11 art space, Hong Kong; Carla Chan: To Outland at SMAC, Berlin, Germany; Conjunctions and Disjunctions at International Symposium on Electronic Art 2016, Hong Kong; Bright Shadow at The Morgue, London, UK. Chung has a PhD in Creative Media, and is currently an independent curator, chairperson and curator at Videotage, Hong Kong, and lecturer at the School of Creative Media, City University of Hong Kong.
Getting Here
Click on the map to enlarge
Most SerendiCity programmes take place at the Xiqu Centre and Art Park in the West Kowloon Cultural District. They are easily accessible by MTR, bus, mini-bus and private car or taxi.
Three programmes take place online, and one takes place online and on-site in and around Temple Street in Yau Ma Tei district.
Getting to West Kowloon Cultural District
To the Xiqu Centre:
Take the MTR Tuen Ma Line to Austin Station
From Tsim Sha Tsui / Xiqu Centre to the Art Park:
Take bus 77M / 215X / 281A / in front of China Hong Kong City (next to the Xiqu Centre)
From the Art Park to Temple Street, Yau Ma Tei:
Take minibus route 74D from the Art Park
Circular Route Bus
This complimentary bus service is a circular route that operates daily from 9am to 8:30pm (every 20 minutes) between MTR Austin Station Exit D/ High Speed Rail Hong Kong West Kowloon Station Exit J (near Xiqu Centre), M+, the Hong Kong Palace Museum and the west entrance of the District (Western Harbour Crossing Toll Plaza bus stop).
Click here to view the map.