Sun.Star Cagayan de Oro

Hong Kong for art and gig lovers

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IT IS easy to develop conflictin­g feelings for Hong Kong, a city on steroids.

Sure, its utter lack of elbow room, dizzying pace, and through-the-roof rates for miniscule spaces, can be overwhelmi­ng even for the most seasoned of travelers. And yet, every quick break in Hong Kong leaves you perfectly wanting for the next.

Once you have ticked off the laundry list of entry-level attraction­s (Victoria Peak, Avenue of Stars, Ngong Ping, and the like), you can still come back to Hong Kong and find yourself with a refreshing itinerary.

I almost always time my Hong Kong trips around the last quarter of the year. Summers in Hong Kong, between the months of June to August, are brutally muggy, and there is a high chance for typhoons to hit in September. The humid spell evaporates

around November, making it a perfect month to be out and about in the city. This early, you can schedule your endof-the-year trip by hounding airline sales (P6,000 to P8,000 should be a fair price range for round-trip tickets) and availing yourself of early-bird discounts for gigs.

Outdoor music and arts

This predictabl­e drop in temperatur­es makes outdoor shows comfortabl­e. So it is no surprise that Hong Kong’s biggest internatio­nal music and arts festival, Clockenfla­p, is scheduled in the month of November. This year, organizers have already announced that its 12th edition will be held from November 22 to 24.

It’s the solid line-up of musical performanc­es that keeps ticket sales up. About 36 acts came for last year’s edition. I bit the bullet when they included Canadian dream-pop group, Alvvays, and post-punk band, Interpol, in the line-up.

Simultaneo­us performanc­es are scattered between three different stages in the expansive venue, allowing the festival to create an immersive experience even when the audience swells to tens of thousands of people.

Apart from catching your favorite internatio­nal or regional acts, there is much to see at the Clockenfla­p. The festival grounds open in the afternoons, you can use this time to comb through the art installati­ons and the maker’s market. Here, cash transactio­ns are prohibited. Instead, Clockenfla­p issues RFIDenable­d wristbands to each festival-goer, making electronic payment possible.

For three consecutiv­e nights, performanc­es and activities typically close a little before midnight, just in time for you to be able to catch the last train out from Admiralty or Central Station.

Street art

To make the most of your stay in Hong Kong, you could spend your mornings going around the city before you hit the concert grounds. If you understand­ably blew most of your trip’s budget on festival tickets like we did, there are admissionf­ree corners that are worth your while, thanks to HKWalls, a grassroots street art festival that started in 2014.

Rather than keep their movement undergroun­d and having graffiti executed guerrilla-style, HKWalls went above board by asking tenants, landlords, and shop owners permission to use their walls. The group’s simple goal is to beautify community spaces. And this they did, noticeably. The visual appeal of the resulting street art lanes has transforme­d them into overnight internet sensations; leave it to the do-it-for-the-(Insta) Gram generation to spread the word. The net effect: tourists now flock to the streets of Central, circling like hawks, for a turn to pose in front of these photogenic walls.

Of all the walls, it is the mural of old townhouses at the intersecti­on of 46 Graham Street and 48 Hollywood Road, Central, which is the most recognizab­le, judging by the long queue by midday. Clearly inspired by the city’s iconic tong lau tenement buildings, it is made by local graffiti artist, Alex Croft.

Nearby is the very hard to miss, Madera Hollywood Hotel, whose façade is entirely covered with figures of Marilyn Monroe, Audrey Hepburn, and Charlie Chaplin, painted in pop-art style. Taxis and private cars still snake their way into the surroundin­g alleyways of Central, so keep one watchful eye on the traffic whilst you strike a pose for your money shot.

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 ??  ?? ALEX CROFT’S tenement-inspired murals are so Insta-famous that you need to get in line to get a shot taken.
ALEX CROFT’S tenement-inspired murals are so Insta-famous that you need to get in line to get a shot taken.
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