City Art Square - Sha TIn, Hong Kong
Kids Playing in City Art Square, Sha Tin - Hong Kong
OLYMPIAN CITY 1 2 3 | WEST KOWLOON | 奧海城 - HONG KONG SHOPPING MALLS (ULTRA HD 4K)
#olympiancity #奧海城 #hongkong #shopping #loveshopping
Welcome to our Hong Kong Walking Tour in one of West Kowloon's premier shopping malls, Olympian City. We start the walking tour in Olympian City 2, followed by 3, then 1. This shopping mall is located in Tai Kok Tsui, West Kowloon.
The 3 adjoining malls is also connected to Olympic MTR Station.
'Olympian City (Chinese: 奧海城; Jyutping: ou3 hoi2 sing4) is a shopping and residential complex built on reclaimed land in Tai Kok Tsui, Kowloon, Hong Kong, next to the MTR Olympic Station. It is one of the main shopping and residential areas in West Kowloon. The shopping arcades, Olympian City 1, 2 and 3, were developed by Sino Land while the residential buildings were developed by MTR Corporation and Sino Land.[1]'
'Phase 1 shopping mall
The Olympian City Phase 1 shopping mall was completed in 2000. It has a 4 storey building with an area of 200,000 square feet. The main tenants include a number of estate agents, beauty centers, music stores, clinics, children's tutorial schools, employment centers, and Market Place by Jasons . 7-11 Convenience Store, Wanning , Japan City , Adventure Park, Yoshinoya , Everyone , Oliver's Super Sandwiches, Ju Shi House and Min, Sugar Heart Xuan, Taoyuan Restaurant , 759 Ashin House , Yipin Ant, Hang Seng Bank , Xiao Wang Beef noodles (completed), Colours the Garden florist, Yi Shijia, Tai Kok Tsui Mai Tai, Yuan Sheng Fang and Waterfall Golf Fitness World. Art galleries are held from time to time in the underground atrium of the mall. There is a flyover leading to the A2 and E exits of the Olympic Station, and the E exiting the flyover is connected to the second phase.
Phase 2 shopping mall
The Olympian City Phase 2 shopping mall was completed in 2001. It has a three-storey building with an area of 600,000 square feet, the largest of the three phases. The second phase of the mall has a number of large shops, including the underground Market Place by Jasons (formerly completed Taste ) and Olympian Park . Other tenants include Bershka (now completed) of H&M and Zara parent company Inditex (currently Francfranc ), Pull & Bear and Stradivarius (closed) (currently Nike ), Martha , New Balance , Uniqlo and SaSa Salsa, etc. . There are also a number of restaurants in the mall, including McDonald's , Mad for Garlic , Jin Manting, Li Bao Ge Restaurant , Peak Restaurant (completed), Tim Good Fortune and UCC Coffee.
Since 2011, the owners have implemented a retail reorganisation strategy for the shopping malls. In 2012, a total of 31 new tenants were stationed in the shopping arcade. In terms of area, the most imported catering industry was introduced. Many Michelin restaurants were also successfully introduced, including Mickey's 2013-star restaurant Tian Hao Yun Dim Sum Specialty Shop, the third-grade Michelin-starred restaurant Diary Red Wine Restaurant , the creative Cantonese restaurant - Family Food (completed), also The Italian restaurant Bene Pizza + Pasta (completed) (current site is a wind hall ). [1]
The main entrance of the Phase 2 shopping mall has a large open-air plaza and an outdoor large TV. There is also a large themed atrium in the underground of the shopping mall. Therefore, it is a popular venue for large-scale events such as watching the World Cup and counting down the festival . Broadcasting Co., Ltd. has held the most frequent events in Olympian City. In addition, many TV dramas and TV commercials are here. There is a flyover leading to the exit of Olympic Station D.
After the completion of Broadway in Olympian City on September 16, 2013, the new cinema brand, the sky, owned by Orange Sky Golden Harvest , entered the mall. Designed by ID & Design International of New York, the new theater covers an area of approximately 65,000 square feet and provides 6 theaters with a total of 951 seats. It is the largest of the group's six cinemas in Hong Kong and uses a 4K projector projection system. With an investment of more than 50 million yuan, it opened on Christmas Eve on December 24, 2013. In 2014, the mall will introduce another 4 to 5 new catering merchants. At the same time, it will strengthen the proportion of fashion brands. At present, restaurants and fashions account for about 25% and 20% respectively.
In 2014, Olympian City will broadcast the World Cup, which will not only set up the largest indoor screen of 430 feet in Hong Kong, but also cooperate with the charity Dragon Ear to provide sign language narration for the first time for the deaf and the hearing impaired. To enable deaf and weak listeners to rely on sign language to obtain real-time information in live events, such as tactical use and on-site and off-site incidents [2].'
The above excerpts are from Wikipedia.
City Art Square @ Shatin designed by BARRIE HO 何周禮
City Art Square @ Shatin designed by BARRIE HO 何周禮
Buddhist art museum to open at Hong Kong’s Tsz Shan Monastery
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Nestled in the hills of Pat Sin Leng in Hong Kong’s New Territories, Tsz Shan Monastery covers half a million square feet (4.7 hectares).
Built by a foundation set up by Hong Kong entrepreneur Li Ka-shing, the monastery opened its gates to the public in 2015.
Beneath its signature 76-metre (249 ft) tall Guanyin Statue, sits a Buddhist Art Museum, which houses a collection of 100 Buddha statues, along with 43 hand-copied Dunhuang sutras exhibited.
The museum will welcome pre-registered visitors from May 1, 2019.
Inside Hong Kong’s cage homes
When houses are the size of parking spaces.
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Hong Kong is the most expensive housing market in the world. It has been ranked as the least affordable housing market on Earth for eight years in a row, and the price per square foot seems to be only going up. The inflated prices are forcing Hongkongers to squeeze into unconventionally small spaces that can affect their quality of life.
Tens of thousands of Hongkongers are living in spaces that range from 75 to 140 square feet. To put that in perspective, the average parking space in the US is about 150 square feet. And in the most extreme cases, Hongkongers have resorted to homes the size of a coffin.
I spent some time exploring the living situation in Hong Kong to find out why housing has become so expensive and spaces so tight.
To understand how Hong Kong’s housing market turned out this way and see how it’s affecting people’s lives, watch the final episode of Borders Hong Kong.
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Vox Borders is an international documentary series by Emmy-nominated producer Johnny Harris exploring life at the edge of nations. For more, visit vox.com/borders.
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Hong Kong 4K - Sunset Drive - Driving Downtown
Sunset drive in the Central district of Hong Kong focusing on the Lan Kwai Fong neighborhood famous for drinking, clubbing and dining. It has over 90 bars and nightclubs squeezed into a small area. Highly recommend visiting this area! Video starts on Hong Kong's Main Street (Des Voeux Rd Central/Queensway, Hennessy Road) know for its popular Ding Ding trams, continues up into the hills just below the Mid Levels, and focuses on narrow streets of the Lan Kwai Fong neighborhood. Enjoy! Location:
Hong Kong (香港), officially the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region of the People's Republic of China (HKSAR), is a special administrative region on the eastern side of the Pearl River estuary in southern China. With over 7.4 million people of various nationalities in a 1,104-square-kilometre (426 sq mi) territory, Hong Kong is one of the most densely populated places in the world.
Hong Kong became a colony of the British Empire after Qing China ceded Hong Kong Island at the end of 1842. The colony expanded to the Kowloon Peninsula in 1860, and was further extended when Britain obtained a 99-year lease of the New Territories in 1898. The territory was transferred to China in 1997. As a special administrative region, Hong Kong maintains separate governing and economic systems from that of mainland China under the principle of one country, two systems.
Originally a sparsely populated area of farming and fishing villages, the territory has become one of the world's most significant financial centres and commercial ports. It is the world's tenth-largest exporter and ninth-largest importer, and its legal tender (the Hong Kong dollar) is the world's 13th-most traded currency. Hong Kong hosts the largest concentration of ultra high-net-worth individuals of any city in the world. Although the city has one of the highest per capita incomes in the world, there is severe income inequality.
Hong Kong is a highly developed territory, ranking seventh on the UN Human Development Index. The city has the largest number of skyscrapers of any city in the world and its residents have some of the longest life expectancies in the world. Over 90% of its population uses public transportation. Air pollution has resulted in a high level of atmospheric particulates in the city.
Central (中環) is the central business district of Hong Kong. It is located in Central and Western District, on the north shore of Hong Kong Island, across Victoria Harbour from Tsim Sha Tsui, the southernmost point of Kowloon Peninsula.
As the central business district of Hong Kong, it is the area where many multinational financial services corporations have their headquarters. Consulates general and consulates of many countries are also located in this area, as is Government Hill, the site of the government headquarters. The area, with its proximity to Victoria Harbour, has served as the centre of trade and financial activities from the earliest days of the British colonial era in 1841, and continues to flourish and serve as the place of administration after the transfer of sovereignty to China in 1997.
Lan Kwai Fong (often abbreviated as LKF) is a small square of streets in Central, Hong Kong. It is now a popular expatriate haunt in Hong Kong for drinking, clubbing and dining.
Xiqu (Chinese Opera) Centre, Hong Kong
Ronald Lu & Partners + Bing Thom Architects will work with the West Kowloon Cultural District Authority to design and deliver a world-class facility for the preservation, development and promotion of this important art form of Chinese cultural heritage in Hong Kong. The Xiqu (Chinese Opera) Centre will be the first of 17 core arts and cultural venues to be opened within the District. The venue will provide a platform for the Xiqu communities to interact, develop, produce the finest examples of Cantonese and other Chinese opera performances, attract new audiences, educate and collaborate with and host international cultural programmes.
Occupying a prime site of 13,800 square metres at the eastern edge of the District on the corner of Canton Road and Austin Road West, the centre will provide a gateway of access to the Cultural District. Early concept designs illustrate that the building will provide a striking entrance, a lantern for the District, employing the Moongate traditional Chinese motif and a dynamic treatment of the facade. Its flow or qi is expressed with curvilinear paths and forms. The architecture incorporates a generous amount of public leisure space, in addition to 2,000 square metres of training and education facilities, two superbly designed auditoria for 1,100 and 400 seats (the latter to be developed in phase 2) respectively and a traditional Tea House for performances for audiences up to 280.The project is scheduled for commission in end of 2016.
Aerial Shots Of Hong Kongs Concrete Jungle
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This beautiful video project brings to life the dense beauty of Hong Kong's concrete jungle - making its buildings look like abstract works of art.
The images and footage Toby Harriman was able to capture for his project, 'The Block Tower', would look at home in a modern art gallery, ranging from close-ups of bee hive-like yellow towers to rainbow-coloured buildings side by side.
With an estimated 6,300 people per square kilometre, Hong Kong is one of the most densely populated cities in the world.
More than seven million people live on 427 square miles of land, while around 29 per cent of Hong Kong's population lives in public rental housing estates.
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All videos aired on this channel have been licensed from their rightful owners.
K11 Art Mall l Hong Kong
K11 is a shopping mall in Hong Kong located in The Masterpiece, developed by New World Development and completed in December 2009. The building features a 340,000-square-foot, 6-storey shopping centre beneath the Hyatt Regency Hong Kong, Tsim Sha Tsui. New World Development claims that it is The World's First Art Mall
NEVER TOO SMALL ep.21 25sqm Tiny Apartment - 379 Queens Road
Architects and interior designers PMDL Architecture + Design have recently completed a renovation of a 1960s five storey walk-up building on one of Hong Kong Island’s busiest thoroughfares. The building consists of five apartments above retail at ground level. Each apartment, with an area of 25m2, is designed around a service wall which implies a subdivision of the apartment while not minimising sense of space.
#architecture #interiordesign #microapartment
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Produced by
Creator: Colin Chee
Director: James McPherson
Producer: Lindsay Barnard
Camera: James Goldman
Editor: Colin Chee
The Chinese Rainbow Colour Writing. Seen in Hong Kong
Hong Kong Street Food. A Walk Around the Stalls and Restaurants of Kowloon
This is a schedule of what you will see:
00:00 Temple street, Beef, Seafoot, Big Squids
02:28 Lunch Boxes prepared for students
06:21 Soup stall in Temple Street
07:06 Dim Sum in the Street
08:18 Hong Kong Street Food. Making Dumplings with Shrimps Filling. Seen in Mong Kok
This is the same man that appears in another video of my channel
However the originel viddeo files are NOT the same. They were done with different cameras and at different times
12:24 more lunch bozes with rice
14:31 Chopping the chicken in the kitchen
17:05 Fast Food Hong Kong Style in Mong Kok
18:27 the octopus snack shop of Mong Kok
19:35 Korean snack in Mong Kok
20:27 the Hot Pot
25:09 Tsim Sha Tsui nighttime. Fish balls, Tempura, Meat and Pork soup and more
31:54 Chinese traditional medical tea
32:31 Cooking the dim sum
33:28 the bakery
34:30 pork soup seen VERY close
34:42 preparing Japanese Takoyaki
37:56 squeezing sugarcane for juice
38:12 marinated eggs and Chinese medical tea
38:46 grilled sausages
39:10 the street bakery
39:28 traditional sweets
39:44 sweets potatoes, eggs, quali eggs, and chestnuts roasted
40:14 more Chinese medical tea
42:40 traditional fast food in Yau Ma Tei
44:18 chinese noodles and soup
45:54 chopping chicken and pork in Yau Ma Tei
47:05 the dim sum stall
48:18 ALIVE seafood stall
48:24 sugarcane squeeze for juice
49:15 copping roasted chicken
50:25 fried chicken lunch box
52:51 fried dumplings
Hong Kong artist photographs city's tram system - BBC News
Photographer Irene Flanhardt takes us on a journey to explore the life of Hong Kong's trams, which have been around for over a century.
Produced by Danny Vincent and Gwyneth Ho.
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RTHK's The Works: Hanart 30th Anniversary; The Black Store Hijack, Artist Johnson Tsang
The Hanart TZ Gallery opened in 1983. Owner and curatorial director Johnson Chang wanted to introduce contemporary art from mainland China, Taiwan, in fact anywhere Chinese artists live, to the Hong Kong public. Currently, the gallery is presenting an exhibition and forums to celebrate its 30th anniversary. The works are on display at the Hong Kong Arts Centre, at Hanart Square in Kwai Chung and in the main Hanart gallery in Central. They cover the history of modern art in China, from traditional ink and calligraphy, to political pop art and the Chinese avant garde.
The art collective THe Black Store is made up of Master's graduates from Visual Culture Studies. Their aim, they say, is to provoke consideration of the valuation of contemporary art works, particularly when marketing gets involved. Their exhibition Hijack, which ends on Saturday February 8th, involves artists' such as Brainrental, Start From Zero, Tse Sai Pei, Sunny Wong, Ink'CHACHA, Harbour Runners, Jo26 and Fan Kai Chuen. But the group says it doesn't only want to stimulate our awareness of how everyday life and art are hijacked commercially. It also hopes to encourage the public to actually take part more in art.
Just last month, local artist Johnson Tsang completed a major solo show, Living Clay, at the Yingge Ceramics Museum in Taiwan. He's a ceramic artist and sculptor, whose work contains realistic images mixed with surreal transformations. Water pouring from a cup can become entwined faces. Flowing figures can arise out of solid shapes. Ceramics and stainless steel can become liquid. Since he took up sculpting full time in 1993, Johnson's works have been exhibited in Hong Kong, Taiwan, Korea, Spain and Switzerland and collected by local and overseas museums and collectors.
PEARL OF THE ORIENT 1950s HONG KONG CROWN COLONY VICTORIA CITY & TIGER BALM GARDEN 16794
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Pearl of the Orient is a short film from International Film Distributors, Inc. (likely from the 1950s) that gives viewers a quick tour of the Hong Kong Island. The film opens with a shot of a ferry in Hong Kong’s Victoria Harbor. Viewers see junks with Hong Kong’s sky scrapers in the background. Cars drive past the pier where commuters leave the ferry and walk to the high-rise towers for work. The film shows Victoria City, dubbed the Wall Street of Hong Kong (01:54), a municipal parking lot, a small park, and women watching a newlywed couple be photographed (02:42). Buses drive through the narrow streets. A rickshaw driver pulls his rickshaw next to narrow double-decker trolley cars. People explore a Chinese shopping arcade (04:02). The film shows a great view of Victoria City from the top of Victoria Peak (04:29). From the vantage point, there is a panoramic shot of the island and the harbor. Viewers see North Point (an urban area) and its Happy Valley Racetrack (05:12), as well as a Japanese department store (05:58). A woman steers a sampan on the water (06:14). Footage shows a number of sampans on the water. There are more shots of streets lined with apartment buildings (07:05), and on the slopes rising above the city are dozens of shanties. One of the island’s highlights for visitors is the ornate Tiger Balm Garden, which is now a theme park of sorts (08:01). Next, viewers see Aberdeen, located on the Port of Hong Kong (09:07). Junks and sampans move on the water. Viewers see the lit-up floating restaurants of Aberdeen at night. A boat woman ferries passengers to one of the floating restaurants. The film concludes with footage of Hong Kong’s streets lit up at night (10:45), including one shot of an illuminated fountain.
Hong Kong, officially the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region of the People's Republic of China and commonly abbreviated as HK, is a special administrative region on the eastern side of the Pearl River estuary in southern China. With over 7.4 million people of various nationalities in a 1,104-square-kilometre (426 sq mi) territory, Hong Kong is the world's fourth most densely populated region.
Hong Kong became a colony of the British Empire after Qing Empire ceded Hong Kong Island at the end of the First Opium War in 1842. The colony expanded to the Kowloon Peninsula in 1860 after the Second Opium War, and was further extended when Britain obtained a 99-year lease of the New Territories in 1898. The entire territory was transferred to China in 1997. As a special administrative region, Hong Kong's system of government is separate from that of mainland China and its people overwhelmingly identify as Hongkongers rather than Chinese.
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Hong Kong protest supporters hold independent Lunar New Year fairs across the city
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Nearly a dozen independent Lunar New Year fairs have sprung up across Hong Kong after in January 2020 the city’s government introduced new rules banning the sale of dry goods, including politically themed products in a bid to ease tensions amid the ongoing protests.Hoping to raise money and morale for their cause, the alternative markets offer protest-themed art and products. Some pro-democracy groups have been ordered to close their stalls at government-run fairs, which for the first time only permit sales of flowers and food.
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Ultra HD 4K Hong Kong Best Shopping Malls - Times Square 時代廣場 (2019)
#hongkong #timessquare #timessquarehk #時代廣場 #4k #UHD
4K full walk-through of one of Hong Kong's Best Shopping Mall called Times Square situated at Causeway Bay, the most vibrant district in Hong Kong, Times Square is one of the most popular tourist spots, favorite shopping and dining places of the region, and is the most vibrant mega-mall in town with foot traffic over 150 thousand each day.Every year, over a hundred of exhibitions and special events are held at Times Square, from art exhibitions, cultural programs, movie promotions, charity events to new product launches.Recognized as the ultimate shopping landmark, Times Square houses more than two hundred and thirty world-renowned brands on sixteen floors, with an exclusive blend of shops ranging from voguish apparel, leather goods, jewelry to accessories. Times Square also encloses a number of reputable electronics and audio vision chain stores, as well as a wide selection of sport specialty stores in a cutting-edge and convenient environment.Located at 10/F-11/F Times Square, the Food Forum provides 10 up-market nationwide eateries, including regional Chinese specialties, various Asian delicacies, and numerous western cuisine, making Food Forum a gourmet paradise for both the locals and tourists.
APM comprises of Audio Visual, Beauty, Personal Care & Health Product, Books, Gift & Entertainment, Convenience Stores, Department Stores & Supermarket, Fashion, Shoes & Bags Home Furnishings, Jewellery, Watches & Accessories, Kids Wear Services & Others.
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HONG KONG INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT ARTS
多元藝術之旅@香港藝術館
A Journey of Contrasts @ HKMoA
Established in 1962, HKMoA is the first public art museum in the
region, now custodian of an art collection of over 17,000 items
revolving around four core pillars of Chinese Antiquities, Chinese
Painting and Calligraphy, China Trade Art as well as Modern and
Hong Kong Art. By curating a world of contrasts from old to new,
Chinese to Western, local to international, with a Hong Kong viewpoint,
the Museum reflects the unique cultural legacy of Hong Kong's
connection across the globe.
Located at Salisbury Road in Tsim Sha Tsui along the famous Victoria
Harbour, the HKMoA is the leading cultural landmark
in Hong Kong, witnessing the development and
evolution of this city. After a three-year major
renovation and expansion project, the
HKMoA will be reopening this November
with a brand new look to meet visitors
from all over the world.
香港藝術館成立於1962年,是香港第一所
公營美術館,館藏超過17,000項藝術珍品,
當中以中國文物、中國書畫、外銷藝術、現代
及香港藝術為四大核心館藏,以香港視點演繹
古今、中西、本地與國際多元萬象的藝術
世界,反映香港作為國際都會的文化承傳。
香港藝術館位於尖沙咀梳士巴利道,前臨國際
知名的維多利亞港,見證香港的發展和
蛻變,是本地最重要的文化地標之一。經過
歷時三年的大型翻新及擴建工程,香港藝術館
將於今年11月重新開放,以全新面貌迎接
來自世界各地訪客。
Location & Details:
Ground Transportation Centre Downramp South
Non-restricted Area
From 6 July to 10 November 2019
四大館藏@香港藝術館
Four Core Collections @ HKMoA
Chinese Painting and Calligraphy
The Chinese Painting and Calligraphy collection covers Chinese
paintings, calligraphies, rubbings, seals and documents such as
manuscripts and letters dating from the Ming dynasty to the twentyfirst century. It focuses mainly on works of Guangdong origin,
Lingnan School paintings, as well as modern Chinese paintings.
Throughout the years, the HKMoA has enriched its collection by
strategic purchases and generous donations from remarkable
collectors and artists, thoroughly presenting the evolution of Chinese
painting and calligraphy from traditional to the modern day.
Chinese Antiquities
The Chinese Antiquities collection of the HKMoA has the most
wide-ranging and the oldest art objects and artifacts. Totalling
more than 4,500 sets of item, they include ceramics, bronzes,
lacquer ware, jade carvings, bamboo carvings, ivory carvings,
glass, textiles, etc. Among them, ceramics is the most representative,
comprising about half of this collection, and spanning from the
Neolithic period to the twentieth century.
DETAILS OF SOME ARTS:
* 青花螭龍纏枝牡丹紋瓶
Vase with peony scroll design
in underglaze blue
明 天順五年(1461)
陶瓷
高31.3厘米 徑10.4厘米
香港藝術館藏品
C1989.0115
Ming fifth year of Tianshun (1461)
Ceramics
H 31.3cm Dia 10.4cm
Collection of Hong Kong Museum of Art
C1989.0115
*林風眠(1900—1991)
Lin Fengmian (1900–1991)
秋色
1977—1978
水墨設色紙本斗方
67.8x68厘米
香港藝術館藏品
FA1991.0010
Autumn landscape
1977–1978
Square scroll, ink and colour on paper
67.8x68cm
Collection of Hong Kong Museum of Art
FA1991.0010
*煜呱(傳)
Youqua (attributed)
維多利亞城遠眺
1854
油彩布本
57x100厘米
香港藝術館藏品
AH1964.0160
Victoria City
1854
Oil on canvas
57x100 cm
Collection of Hong Kong Museum of Art
AH1964.0160
*石家豪(1970—)
Shieh Ka-ho, Wilson (1970–)
香港環覽
2017
水墨及不透明水彩紙本橫幅
40x142.5厘米
香港藝術館藏品
AC2018.0057
Hong Kong panorama
2017
Horizontal scroll, ink and gouache on paper
40x142.5cm
Collection of Hong Kong Museum of Art
AC2018.0057
*吳冠中(1919—2010)
Wu Guanzhong (1919–2010)
City night
1997
Ink and colour on paper
96x180 cm
Collection of
Hong Kong Museum of Art
Donated by Mr Wu Guanzhong
and his family
FA2002.0008
*王無邪(1936—)
Wucius Wong (1936–)
香江幻彩(局部)
1999
水墨設色紙本圖冊
47x374厘米
香港藝術館藏品
AC2006.0105
Scintillating Hong Kong Harbour (details)
1999
Album, ink and colour on paper
47x374cm
Collection of Hong Kong Museum of Art
AC2006.0105
SOURCE: hongkongairport.com
First Look: Art Central Hong Kong 2019