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

China Climate – Oil Paintings By Josephine Do

Visual Arts

Event Detail Image
Art Genres / Sub-categories

Painting

Location

Art Beatus Gallery

Start Date

2011/01/05

End Date

2011/01/27

Art Genres / Sub-categories

Painting

Location

Art Beatus Gallery

Start Date

2011/01/05

End Date

2011/01/27

China Climate – Oil Paintings By Josephine Do

Description

Description

Through visits and art residences in China, Josephine Do has developed and changed the style of her artwork as well as herself. She has taken images that are characteristically Chinese, fused them and created a new reality of her own. Her works show an immediacy and a suggestion of speed. Her use of vibrant colours and texture, the cropping, pasting, enlarging and manipulating of images reflect a sense of contemporary China.

The intermingling of traditions and the attitudes to show history as a process of change are evident in the exhibits of CHINA CLIMATE. Josephine Do has moved considerably forward in her search for her own identity. The works are simplified to a few appropriated images instead of activity in colour and texture. On each of her canvases, she has appropriated and distorted imageries of traditional Chinese paintings blending them with propaganda images to suggest an overall calm and happiness but uncertainties about the changing views of the past.

Josephine Do, born in Hong Kong, went to live in New Zealand with her parents in 1984 when she was 7 years old. She changed her Chinese name from Do Pui Yee to Josephine, a name that she picked from a name list in the Oxford Dictionary. She received her Bachelor of Arts degree at Auckland University of Technology and graduated with a Master of Fine Arts in the year 2000. For her doctoral studies she chose the topic of CHINA TODAY. It was important to her because her knowledge and relationship with the Chinese culture were developed through the close relationship and identity with her parents rather than having a first hand experience of living in China.

Organiser / Presenter Art Beatus Gallery
Artist:Josephine DO

Note:This event record is compiled from "Hong Kong Visual Arts Yearbook 2011" published by Department of Fine Arts, The Chinese University of Hong Kong.

Info

Indoor / Outdoor

Indoor

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