Kuwait Times

Neon nostalgia in Hong Kong as lights go out

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Neon sign maker Wu Chi-kai is one of the last remaining craftsmen of his kind in Hong Kong, a city where darkness never really falls thanks to the 24-hour glow of myriads of lights. During his 30 years in the business, neon came to define the urban landscape, huge flashing signs protruding horizontal­ly from the sides of buildings, advertisin­g everything from restaurant­s to mahjong parlors.

But with the growing popularity of brighter LED lights, seen as easier to maintain and more environmen­tally friendly, and government orders to remove some vintage signs deemed dangerous, the demand for specialist­s like Wu has dimmed. Despite a waning client-base, 50year-old Wu continues in the trade, working with glass tubes dusted inside with fluorescen­t powder and containing various gases including neon or argon, as well as mercury, to create different colors.

He bends them into shape over a powerful gas burner at a scorching 1,000 degrees Celsius. “Being able to twist straight glass materials into the shape I want, and later to make it glow-it’s quite fun,” he said, though it is not without risks. Wu works without a safety visor and has been scalded and cut by glass that sometimes cracks and explodes.

“The painful experience­s are the memorable ones,” he adds philosophi­cally. Wu’s father used to scale Hong Kong’s characteri­stic bamboo scaffoldin­g while installing neon signs across the city. Believing the installati­on work too dangerous for his son, he instead encouraged Wu to learn to make the signs as a teenager.

Wu became one of only around 30 masters of the craft in Hong Kong, even in neon’s heyday. Although demand is now significan­tly lower than at neon’s peak in the 1980s, Wu says there has been revived interest and nostalgia for its gentler glow, immortaliz­ed in the atmospheri­c movies of award-winning Hong Kong director Wong Kar-wai. Some of Wu’s clients are now requesting pieces for indoor decoration. “I’ve been working with neon lights all my life. I can’t think of anything else I’d be better suited for,” he says. — AFP

The painful experience­s are the memorable ones

 ??  ?? These pictures show neon works by Hong Kong sign maker Wu Chi-kai in Hong Kong. — AFP photos
These pictures show neon works by Hong Kong sign maker Wu Chi-kai in Hong Kong. — AFP photos
 ??  ?? Neon sign maker Wu Chi-kai looks at one of his works.
Neon sign maker Wu Chi-kai looks at one of his works.
 ??  ?? Wu Chi-kai demonstrat­es how to make a neon sign.
Wu Chi-kai demonstrat­es how to make a neon sign.
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