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A still from Nick Deocampo’s Oliver (1983), part of the first Asian Avant-Garde Film Festival at the M+ Museum in Hong Kong, which tells the story of a gay female impersonator who stages a provocative performance of bondage and escape. Photo: Nick Deocampo

Yoko Ono, Bong Joon-ho, Zhang Peili and a whole lot more in indie film festival at M+ museum in Hong Kong

  • Directed by photographer Wing Shya, the first Asian Avant-Garde Film Festival at M+, Hong Kong’s museum of visual culture, is an indie movie feast
  • It’s a chance to see offbeat features, video art and themed short-film and moving-image compilations, and join workshops including one on printmaking
Asian cinema

The inaugural edition of the Asian Avant-Garde Film Festival at M+, Hong Kong’s museum of visual culture, begins on May 30 and offers a diverse four-day programme of screenings, exhibitions, performances, talks and workshops.

The festival offers a chance to view work by figures such as Japanese multimedia artist Yoko Ono, South Korean film director Bong Joon-ho and British-Palestinian multimedia and installation artist Mona Hatoum.
Wing Shya, the festival’s art director and a celebrity photographer best known for his collaborations with Hong Kong director Wong Kar-wai, says he is particularly looking forward to seeing rare feature films that are “usually hard to discover” and “very off the beaten path”.

Supported by the Chanel Culture Fund, the festival is a place for creators and the general public to discover “more nutritious” works – films, videos and artworks that are rich sources of inspiration – says Wing.

Wing Shya, a photographer known for his collaborations with film director Wong Kar-wai, is the art director of the first Asian Avant-Garde Film Festival, held at West Kowloon’s M+ museum. Photo: Wing Shya
Musician Nnscya will create an experimental soundscape to accompany Wing Shya’s unseen 35mm film photographs in “Phantom Frequencies: An Audiovisual Experience by Wing Shya x nnscya”. Photo: Nnscya
One of his own works will feature on the opening night at M+’s Grand Stair.

Phantom Frequencies: An Audiovisual Experience by Wing Shya x nnscya brings together a range of the veteran photographer’s 35mm film images, some never seen in public before, alongside an experimental soundscape crafted by musician Nnscya, real name Annisa Cheung Ching-yu.

The collaboration between two generations of Hong Kong creatives will be enhanced by interactive media artist Samson Wong Sing-wun, whose audio-reactive design technology will transform Wing’s photography in real time, in response to Nnscya’s performance.

Wong, who has worked on international blockbusters including the Transformers and X-Men franchises, won the prize for best visual effects at the 55th Golden Horse Awards for work on Zhang Yimou’s Shadow (2018).

Touch Me, Touch Me Not brings together nine films focusing on the body and its emotional physicality. One of the films included is Patty Chang’s “Fountain” (1999), a documentary of a performance about self-representation and the female body. Photo: Patty Chang/ M+
In the Fearless & Fierce: The Female Gaze programme, Indigenous Australian artist Tracey Moffatt’s Mother (2009) draws on intense maternal relationships portrayed in classic Hollywood cinema and TV dramas. Photo: Tracey Moffatt/ Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney

Silke Schmickl, Chanel lead curator for moving image at M+, says the newly commissioned Phantom Frequencies is an “unusual, machine-generated activation of still photography” with live-performed sound frequencies, in a collaboration that allows artists of different generations to “experiment with new formats and respond to each other’s sensibilities”.

Before the performance of Wing’s work at sunset, the festival’s first-day afternoon programme will comprise screenings of “Touch Me, Touch Me Not” (a compilation of nine short films) and “Fearless & Fierce: the Female Gaze” (nine moving-image works), a screen-printing workshop with artist-printmaker Kinchoi Lam, and a vinyl-only DJ set.

The screenings and workshop will repeat on each day of the festival.

The festival’s main objective is to champion independent moving-image practices from across Asia, from original visual languages to cross-cultural dialogues, “and their interconnections with other art forms such as visual art, photography, design, performing arts and music”, says Schmickl.

Part of the Fearless & Fierce: The Female Gaze programme, Mako Idemitsu’s narrative-within-a-narrative Kiyoko’s Situation (1989) depicts the deeply rooted cultural roles of Japanese women through the parallel lenses of two female artists, Kiyoko and Tani. Photo: Mako Idemitsu/ M+
In the Slivers of Desire with Nick Deocampo programme, Roxlee’s Juan Gapang (Johnny Crawl) (1987) portrays a man covered in white paint and crawling through Manila, the Philippines. Photo: Roxlee

The festival, she adds, will highlight “formal and conceptual correspondences between historical and contemporary works” through various mediums, such as experimental and expanded cinema, performance films, investigational documentaries, and animation.

“The films are indie, as the vast majority of them have been produced independently and without a commercial distribution purpose in mind, yet their artistic qualities and unorthodox nature set them apart from, let’s say, indie art-house cinema,” she says.

“Avant-garde is a signifier for the experimental ideas and new approaches these artists introduced through their works at the time of their making.”

Existing M+ collections informed the basis of the festival’s film selection, says Schmickl. “A good example is ‘Secrets and Lies’, a programme that features three speculative essay-films by award-winning M+ collection artists Ho Tzu-nyen, Bo Wang and Lee Kai-chung, who investigate chapters of Asia’s unresolved Cold War history using Hong Kong as a vantage point.”

Yau Ching, Ellen Pau and Wong Chi-fai’s Here’s Looking At You, Kid! (1990) is featured in Self x Society, which looks at experimental films exploring the paradoxes an individual faces in society. Photo: Videotage
Screenings of “Self x Society” and the aforementioned “Touch Me, Touch Me Not” will both include works by Ellen Pau, a pioneer of video art in Hong Kong since the 1980s who co-founded the new-media artist collective Videotage in 1986.

Other Asian artists to feature include Nick Deocampo, an award-winning filmmaker, film historian and pioneering advocate of queer cinema in the Philippines; Lu Yang, an internationally acclaimed, Shanghai-based new media artist; and Zhang Peili, a mainland Chinese contemporary artist and video art pioneer.

The Asian Avant-Garde Film Festival at M+, West Kowloon Cultural District, 38 Museum Drive, Kowloon. May 30 to June 2. For more information, visit the The Asian Avant-Garde Film Festival page on the M+ website.
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