Author Archive
drunk
Friday, December 18th, 2009dessin de caratère 醉 qui signifie bu, ivre, grisé, etc. par un étudiant de HKDI. Avez-vous bu récemment?
醉, or drunk, by a student from Hong Kong Design Institute. So when was the last time you got tipsy?
Altermondialisme?
Monday, August 24th, 2009kung-fu master
Friday, August 14th, 2009Mao dans un village
Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009across the Pacific on Canada Day
Wednesday, July 1st, 2009Hope you had a happy one in Canada. Meanwhile, in Hong Kong across the other huge pond, 1st July is also the HKSAR (Special Administrative Region) establishment day, commemorating its retrocession to China as well as the severed ties with the British empire. It has, since 2003, been a platform of public venting regarding various local causes. Below is a parade of selected pictures…
dépêche toi!
Monday, June 15th, 2009Guangzhou civilisé
Monday, June 8th, 2009La beauté avec les idéogrammes chinois demeure la facilité de les transformer au dessin ou motif sans souci. L’exemple qui suit est créé par la ville de Guangzhou. Mot par mot, les caractères 文明 廣州 s’expriment:
文明 wen ming - c’est-à-dire civilisé
廣州 Guangzhou
Il suffit d’un petit peu de votre imagination visuelle pour interpreter d’autres messages portant dans ce panneau d’affichage.
tuya - stupid
Wednesday, June 3rd, 2009Who tagged above? It is right outside a construction site in Guangzhou (also known as Canton in the past) , a city in Southeastern China. Was it someone fed up with rapid urban redevelopment? A common scenary in many major cities in China is the leveling of huge city blocks replacing them with highrises. The “pockets” that temporarily survive become “villages in a city” or cheng zhong cun (城中村). These areas are at times the synonym of ghettos. Can that be a better model of (non) development? Are there alternatives?
tuya - yin yan
Monday, May 25th, 2009school bag
Monday, May 18th, 2009La nostalgie des années 1970, quand plusieurs produits sont encore “fabriqué à Hong Kong”, comme le “school bag” ici. Ne négligez pas les matières plastiques, car c’était le domaine où remporte le premier million de dollars pour Li, La Shing, l’homme d’affaires le plus riche à Hong Kong.
Nostalgia 1970s, when things were still “made in Hong Kong”. This is an ad for a “school bag”, which is more like a briefcase, as seen in Hong Kong Museum of History. Don’t underestimate plastics. Li, Ka Shing, the richest man in Hong Kong, started his empire with a plastic manufacturing factory!









![bj-street-art [Desktop Resolution]](http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2436/3628066033_e485bd6b21.jpg)





SUBSCRIBE