The Borneo Post (Sabah)

In a changing city, a glitzy Hong Kong gallery grapples with censorship

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HONG KONG: Between glass and soaring concrete walls, Hong Kongers queued for the opening of the much-anticipate­d multimilli­on-dollar art museum M+, a project bedevilled by delays, spiralling costs, and now the spectre of censorship.

The Kowloon gallery — built directly above a major train tunnel that for weeks ferried thousands to the 2019 prodemocra­cy protests — was supposed to open four years ago, and is the first in Asia dedicated to 20th- and 21stcentur­y visual culture.

While the Swiss-designed venue aims to rival Western leaders in contempora­ry art curation, critics say it must also grapple with a shrinking space for freedom of expression and growing self-censorship.

And ahead of the opening on Friday attention has focused on the decision to not display a photo series by Chinese artist Ai Weiwei in the museum.

“Politics shouldn't override art,” said Yip, who gave only her surname, while waiting to enter the museum on a bright autumnal morning.

“The current situation is very disappoint­ing," interrupte­d her husband, also in his sixties.

In the series in question, Ai is showing his middle finger to institutio­ns around the world, including the White House, Germany's Reichstag — and Beijing's Tiananmen Square.

Earlier in the week, officials confirmed the artwork would not be shown, stating “artistic expression is not above the law”.

That political tension was not immediatel­y on display as the museum's first visitors — many

Some people said in the news recently that law is above art, but I think art should be free and creative.

— Dennis

touting designer handbags better suited to Shanghai fashion week — roamed the atrium.

Other visitors, most of whom declined to be fully identified, gave a different perspectiv­e to AFP.

“Some people said in the news recently that law is above art, but I think art should be free and creative,” said Dennis, 35, who only gave his first name.

He said instead of attracting artists as initially envisaged, the gallery was scaring them away.

First conceived 14 years ago and budgeted at US$760 million — a figure officials have said is likely to be higher when the data is released — the 65,000square-metre gallery has opened in a hugely different political climate.

The National Security law, passed in June last year following the 2019 prodemocra­cy protests, targets anything deemed "secession, subversion, terrorism or collusion with foreign forces" and has quickly criminalis­ed a host of political views.

And critics say it has also stifled a once-thriving artistic community, clamping down on freedoms and expression­s previously celebrated in the city.

In March, Hong Kong's leader Carrie Lam said authoritie­s will be “on full alert” to ensure exhibition­s do not undermine national security while simultaneo­usly promising artistic freedom of expression, in response to a question about M+'s upcoming shows.

But critic Leung Po-shan asked how the art museum would function under such restrictio­ns: “Is it possible to omit June 4 in stories about China's contempora­ry arts?”

“All the cultural and art institutio­ns, not only M+, are facing the same problem of the unlocatabl­e ‘red line',” she said.

“M+ is big and it will become a wind vane, but we are not sure how well it can defend itself.”

Despite concerns, others were delighted.

Visitors leaving ‘Hong Kong: Here and Beyond' — among the exhibits showcasing some 1,500 works from the museum's 8,000 piece archive — expressed their surprise at some of the work shown.

“When we walked around the galleries there are some politicall­y sensitive items related to China and we are happy to see that they are displayed,” said Ashley Wong, 35.

One man, who declined to give his name, said the situation was not black and white.

“How you can find the boundary, how you can work within the boundary. That's still freedom,” he said.

“We are not really tied up with our hands, if you know how to get around, you will have the freedom.”

On a small drawing pinned to the museum's message wall, one visitor defiantly wrote: “No matter how Hong Kong changes, this is our home, this will never change.”

 ?? — AFP photos ?? People queue to enter the M+ art museum on its opening day in Hong Kong.
— AFP photos People queue to enter the M+ art museum on its opening day in Hong Kong.
 ?? ?? A tram decorated with signage of the M+ art museum commutes on a street in Hong Kong.
A tram decorated with signage of the M+ art museum commutes on a street in Hong Kong.
 ?? ?? ‘1/30th of a Second Underwater’ by Wang Wei.
‘1/30th of a Second Underwater’ by Wang Wei.
 ?? ?? People look at The Great Pageant Show by Holly Lee on the opening day of the M+ art museum in Hong Kong.
People look at The Great Pageant Show by Holly Lee on the opening day of the M+ art museum in Hong Kong.

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