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Details
- Place where the work was made
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Canada
- Date
- 2018
- Media category
- Materials used
- handscroll and catalogue box set; coloured ink on paper
- Edition
- AP 3
- Dimensions
- 205.0 cm long
- Credit
- Gift of the artist and ART LABOR Gallery 2019
- Location
- Not on display
- Accession number
- 156.2019
- Copyright
- © Howie Tsui
- Artist information
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Howie Tsui
Works in the collection
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About
This work is a two-metre long printed version of Tsui’s original ‘scroll’ video installation of Retainers of Anarchy. The video work consists of hundreds of drawings which Tsui produced over three years. In this work the events associated with the protagonists of the video play out across the length of a traditional-seeming handscroll.
Tsui’s works feature a gleefully impure mix of cultural sources. His original drawings are produced in a style strongly influenced by horror manga with marked exaggeration of features. The print pictorially references major works of Chinese art, including the Song dynasty (960-1279) handscroll, Along the River during the Qingming Festival by Zhang Zeduan (1085–1145); The Water Margin bandit stories set during the Song dynasty [Jp: Suikoden]; and the Qing dynasty (1644-1912) painting One Hundred Horses, 1728, by Giuseppe Castiglione (Lang Shining, 1688 –1766). Modern life emerges in the imagery of a 20th century Hong Kong under British rule as represented by the Kowloon Walled City demolished in 1994. Both Song period China and the Walled City embody ideas of self-determined rules of conduct and resistance to authority. Tsui’s extraordinary video and this printed accompaniment to it explore the lives and fortunes of people residing ‘anarchically’ on the fringes – and simultaneously at the heart of – conventional society.
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Exhibition history
Shown in 1 exhibition
Assembly, Australian National University, Canberra, 12 Feb 2024–24 May 2024