Compiled from the Performing Arts programmes* and Visual Arts exhibition records from HKADC’s Arts Yearbooks and Annual Arts Survey projects dating from 2010.

I Am Rich !

Visual Arts

Event Detail Image
Art Genres / Sub-categories

Mixed Media and Installation

Location

Contemporary by Angela Li

Start Date

2009/11/19

End Date

2010/01/10

Art Genres / Sub-categories

Mixed Media and Installation

Location

Contemporary by Angela Li

Start Date

2009/11/19

End Date

2010/01/10

I Am Rich !

Description

Description

In the last century, China has immersed itself in the “get rich anxiety”. After being invaded numerous times over the years, Chairman Mao’s famous motto of “being backwards makes people suffer from thrashing” blaming all failures and misery on their lagging behind in social development. Therefore, we have to “overtake England and catch up with America” – China started fighting to get into the commercial competitions with her bare hands. “I am rich” is like the tight and rapid pounding of a drum, hurrying the expansion of the economy.

Known as the “poor relatives” twenty years ago, China has emerged as one of the largest consumers of luxury goods both domestically and internationally. Chinese nationals have become internationally renowned collectors of jewellery, watches, art, fine wines and property. Flamboyant Chinese businessmen are often, however, seen as clumsy and lacking class! But as the world emerges from the financial crisis, all eyes remain on China and her potential as the world’s largest market for almost every consumer product.

Contemporary by Angela Li presents “I am rich!”, an exhibition full of contradictions and questions. Six contemporary artists are invited to discuss different social phenomenon caused by the rapid economic growth of China. Their works also reveal the psychological unbalance of the new-rich Chinese. It does not only dig at the lack of business ethics of Chinese business people, but also the shallowness and philistinism of nouveau riche, as well as the thirst for wealth of some Chinese. China inescapably played a part in the recent economic crisis. Now that the Chinese are no longer the “poor relatives”, did they find their real source of happiness in wealth?

Organiser / Presenter Contemporary by Angela Li
Curator:Fang Lei
Artists:Liao Yibai; Chen Wenling; Yang Tiejun; Zhang Qikai; Wang Xu; Xia Yu

Note:This event record is compiled from "Hong Kong Visual Arts Yearbook 2010" published by Department of Fine Arts, The Chinese University of Hong Kong.

Info

Indoor / Outdoor

Indoor

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