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For his first solo exhibition in the city of his birth, Canadian-Hong Kong artist Howie Tsui presented a new series of mixed-media works featuring surreal characters and absurdist scenes, in large part inspired by his nostalgia for mid-20th century Chinese novelists and late-20th century screen and television writers working primarily within the wuxia (martial arts) genre.
In actuality, Tsui’s pigment and ink paintings, Western surrealism, and Chinese painting, to Hong Kong television soap operas and martial arts classics. In Tsui’s large painting (2023) a plethora of grotesque characters—baton-holding security guards with heads resembling mahjong tiles, a blindfolded woman playing the Chinese zither, a (Chinese decorative rocks in irregular shapes) in the form of an emperor, and a squatting spectator with the wings of a bat—appear as sci-fi-inspired reimaginations of the well-known (1984), a fiction adapted for Hong Kong television station TVB. While Tsui adroitly captures specific (and regional) collective memories, he also subverts them by reshaping and distorting their recognizable characters and features. Tsui further expanded the series to reference similarly iconic TVB scenes in paintings such as , , and (all 2023). For Tsui, embracing these culturally coded subjects, especially for generations of Chinese immigrants like himself, is a subtle form of resistance against the forces of alienation, as well as the erasure of cultural or historical identity.