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词条 Ho Siu Kee
释义

  1. Education

  2. Career

  3. Major works

      Installation    Videos and photographs  

  4. Major artwork

      Aureola no. 1    Sit / Stand / Lie  

  5. Exhibitions

  6. References

{{multiple issues|{{BLP sources|date=March 2015}}{{autobiography|date=March 2015}}{{more footnotes|date=March 2015}}{{original research|date=March 2015}}{{overly detailed|date=March 2015}}{{peacock|date=March 2015}}{{Orphan|date=March 2015}}
}}{{Infobox artist
| name = Ho Siu Kee 何兆基
| birth_date = 1964
| birth_place = Hong Kong
| field = Performance Art, Installation Art, Sculpture Art
| training = Department of Fine Arts, CUHK(1989)
MFA degree in Sculpture from the Cranbrook Academy of Art(1995)
Doctor of Fine Art degree from Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology(2003)
| works = Women and Blood Series (1993–1995)
Love the Fucking Country (1997,2000)
Ten Steps One Kneel to Xin Ya (1996, 2003, 2005)
| participated in = Para/Site Inmedia HK
}}Ho Siu-Kee ({{lang|zh|何兆基}}) is a Hong Kong artist and visual art scholar who is well known in Hong Kong, China, Europe and the U.S.[1] Born in 1964 in Hong Kong. He appears as self-portraitures through the visual presentation of his own body imagery employing different media, such as sculpture, installation, photography and video. In 2012, Ho was selected as Associate Member of the Royal British Society of Sculptors.[2]

Education

Ho received a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from the Chinese University of Hong Kong in 1989. Afterwards, he went to the United States and graduated with an MFA degree in Sculpture from the Cranbrook Academy of Art in 1995. In 2003, he received his Doctor of Fine Art degree from Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (RMIT) University, Australia with the research topic of "Bodily Perception as a Means of Expression in Contemporary Art Practice".[3]

Career

Apart from his artistic practice, Ho is also an art educator. He worked in Hong Kong Polytechnic University of the School of Design, from 1997 to 2000. In 2000, he joined the Hong Kong Arts Centre to help the establishment of its art education division namely Hong Kong Art School. Before teaching at Hong Kong Baptist University, Dr. Ho was the Academic Head of Hong Kong Art School.[3]

Major works

Exploration of one's own senses and bodily perception is what Ho concern most. The visual presentation materializes and projects the innate personal experience as means of artistic expression which is expected to make up the communication between the "Self" and the "Other".[3]

Installation

Ho works like a scientist in a laboratory, he elaborated a methodology of research and invented his own tools of experimentation. His "dream machines" remind Duchamp's ready-mades and Tinguely's machines à ne rien faire (useless), mainly because they look more like industrial products than pure aesthetic creations. Ho's constructions are rational artifacts invented to put his own body in situations of tension. The purpose of his persistent quest is to experience primordial perceptions at their phenomenological level.

"Walking on Two Balls" in 1995 was a way to feel the precarious balance of the first steps, or better, and to make the viewers aware of the complexity of what looks like the very simple act of walking. "The Third Eye" (1996), is an ingenious device to dismount the mechanism of vision, turning obvious the hidden, unconscious process that results in the act of seeing. With "Flying Machine" (1995-1996), and the "Sisyphus Chair" (1998), the myths of Greece are revisited by Ho to show how absurd are man’s attempts to go beyond the physical limits of his body. A series of works, “Gravity Hoop” in 1997, and “An Evolutionary Body” in 2000, illustrate in a very original way the scientific theories that explain the human body as a machine, constrained by the laws of the Universe.[4]

Videos and photographs

Most of Ho's artworks begin with the exploration of his own senses and bodily perception and appear as self-portraitures through the visual presentation of his own body imagery employing different media, such as photography and video. The visual presentation materializes and projects the innate personal perceptual experience as a means of artistic expression which is expected to make up the communication between the "Self" and the "Others".

The appeal of artistic creation is not limited to the expressive and communicative function to be projected outwardly, it also includes the inwardly-directed self-reflection of the artist. The different forms and imagery of self-portraiture in a variety of individual works are like reflections in the mirror. The mirror image as an object perceived by myself causes the invisible self to become visible. It helps us to understand and to identity with the ‘Self’. Eventually, one can get along better with ‘Others’ in this phenomenal world and hopefully lead to a happier life.[5]

Major artwork

Aureola no. 1

Sit / Stand / Lie

Sit/ Stand Lie depicts the simple and basic postures of sitting, standing and lying down. When it is displayed you relate them to a cross, extending them into different rooms. It is one of the most favorite artwork of Ho Siu Kee, because it is the critical turning point of his creative development. Quoted from the interview, Hong Kong artist Kurt Chan Yuk-keung said, "I fully understand what you mean because I can see some development in its simplicity. It is like getting some taste from drinking some pure water."[6]

Exhibitions

Year Name Venue
2013 Déjà Disparu Pearl Lam Galleries, Hong Kong
2012Aureola: Ho Siu Kee (solo exhibition) Grotto Fine Art, Hong Kong
Heavenly Mundanity: Ho Siu Kee (solo exhibition) Lumenvisum, Hong Kong
Cityzening, Jorge Vargas Museum University of the Philippines Diliman, Philippines
Hong Kong and Macau Visual Arts Biennial - Sculpting Space: Hong Kong Public Art Beijing World Art Museum, The China Millennium Monument, Beijing, China
Hong Kong and a WorldLui Hai Su Museum, Shanghai, China
2011 Strolling on the Water - Hong Kong Contemporary Art Exhibition Museum of Contemporary Art Westlake, Hangzhou, China
2010 Contemporary Hong Kong Sculpture ExhibitionGrotto Fine Art, Hong Kong
Echo: Hong Kong Sculpture Biennale Department of Fine Arts, The Chinese University of Hong Kong and Hong Kong Sculpture, Hong Kong
2009 Ho Siu Kee: The Constrained Body (solo exhibition) Grotto Fine Art, Hong Kong
Art in Use: Sculptural Objects Hong Kong Arts Centre, Hong Kong
Gongju International Art Festival Limlip Art Museum, Korea
Charming Experience Hong Kong Museum of Art
2008 Digitalogue Hong Kong Museum of Art
2007 Reversing Horizon MOCA, Shanghai
Pivotal Decade – Hong Kong Art 1997-2007 Chinese Arts Centre, Manchester, UK[7]
2006 HO, Siu-kee: Body Gesture (solo exhibition) Hong Kong Arts Centre
2004 Speed Up Swiss Sports Museum, Basel
Gods Becoming Men Frissiras Museum, Athens
2003 The Visible Form of Intention – Works by HO, Siu-kee (solo exhibition) Grotto Fine Art, Hong Kong
2001 Translated Acts – Performance and Body Art from East Asia, Haus Der Kulturen Der Welt ( House of World Cultures ) Berlin & Queens Museum of Art, New York
49th Venice Biennial – Hong Kong, China Official Exhibition La Biennale di Venezia, Italy
2000 Connotative Body - Works by HO, Siu-kee (solo exhibition) IT Park, Taipei
Body Schema – Works by HO, Siu-kee (solo exhibition), Fundacao Oriente Gallery Casa Garden, Macau
1999 Fast>>Forward: New Chinese Video Art Fundacao Oriente Contemporary Art Museum, Macao; Galerie Rudolfinum, Czech Republic
1998 Inside Out: New Chinese Art Asia Society, New York & San Francisco Museum of Modern Art
1997 Hong Kong Art 1997 - Collection of the Hong Kong Museum of Art Beijing and Guangzhou Exhibition National Museum of Fine Arts, Beijing and Guangdong; Museum of Art, Guangzhou
Contemporary Hong Kong Art Biennial Awards Winners Exhibition Hong Kong Museum of Art
Cities on the Move, Vienna Secession, Austria & capc Musee d’art Contemporain de Bordeaux France & P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center, New York
1996 23rd International Biennial of São Paulo (Hong Kong Official Representative) Fundacao Bienal de São Paulo, Brazil
[8]

References

1. ^{{cite book|last1=Vigneron|first1=Frank|title=之間: 中西藝術賞析比較|date=2007|publisher=Chinese University Press|location=Hong Kong}}
2. ^{{cite web|url=http://ava.hkbu.edu.hk/people/dr-ho-siu-kee/|title=Dr. Ho Siu Kee|website=Academy of Visual Arts}}
3. ^{{cite web|last1=Siu Kee|first1=Ho|website=Ho, Siu-kee|url=http://www.siu-kee.com/about_the_artist|title=Ho, Siu-kee 何兆基}}
4. ^{{cite web|last1=Tsong-Zung|first1=Chang|title=Ho Siu-Kee|url=http://entretenimento.uol.com.br/27bienal/anteriores/1996/artistas/ho_siu-kee.jhtm|website=UOL|publisher=UOL|accessdate=19 March 2015}}
5. ^{{cite web|title=Ho Siu-Kee|url=http://ocula.com/artists/ho-siu-kee/|website=OCULA|publisher=OCULA}}
6. ^{{cite book|last1=Ho|first1=Siu-kee|title=You xian shen{{!}}The constrained body / Ho|date=2010|publisher=Xianggang yi shu zhong xin|location=Xianggang|isbn=9789627630753|edition=Chu ban}}
7. ^{{cite web | url = http://archive.cfcca.org.uk/index.php/Detail/occurrences/342 | title = 'The Pivotal Decade' exhibition, various artists, 30 June - 23 September 2007 | website = CFCCA Library and Archive catalogue | publisher = Centre for Chinese Contemporary Art | access-date = 2018-09-08 }}
8. ^{{cite web|url=http://ava.hkbu.edu.hk/people/dr-ho-siu-kee/|title=Academy of Visual Arts|website=Ho Siu-Kee}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Ho, Siu Kee}}

5 : 1964 births|Living people|Cranbrook Academy of Art alumni|Hong Kong artists|Hong Kong Baptist University faculty

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