Karin Weber Gallery

June Ho: Fireworks Over The Swimming Pool

June Ho: Night Run

Slow

Palms in the City

June Ho: Details

June Ho: Falling All Around

June Ho: Footbridge

June Ho: gaai1 hau2 jau5 lok6

June Ho: Good Old Days

June Ho: Studio, Sunday

June Ho: Sweet Morning

June Ho: Troubled Weekend Morning

June Ho: We Missed the One in the Crowd

June Ho: Driving Up

June Ho: Solitary

Installation Photo: 1

Installation Photo: 2

Installation Photo: 3

Exhibition Details

Exhibition

Goodbye, Hello.

Date + Time

14th July to 13th August 2022

Location

Karin Weber Gallery

Opening Reception

Thursday, 14th July 2022 at 6-8pm

eCatalog
Info

Karin Weber Gallery is excited to introduce ‘Goodbye, Hello.’, a solo presentation of new prints by Hong Kong artist June Ho.

“Once there was an elephant at Hong Kong’s Lai Yuen Amusement Park, now there are only walls of graffiti that have been whitewashed over; once Hong Kong was a fishing village, now Hong Kong is packed with housing estates; once there were mountains and ancient houses in Hong Kong, now there are railways and high-rises,” observes the artist.

In her thirties, June Ho has not grown up with a historic Hong Kong, but living in this city, navigating its roads, taking in the scenery, watching the movies, have all shaped her perception of the Hong Kong constructed by those before us. This is the Hong Kong she experiences, the city she observes, the place she participates in through her daily life. Hong Kong has long been regarded as a highly urbanised place, but among the many skyscrapers nestles the unique downtown scenery that can only be found here. They could be traces left by changing times or born from the chemistry between a citizen’s lifestyle and the cityscape. Living here, she is experiencing other’s experiences, searching for Hong Kong’s cultural symbols.

In this exhibition of prints, June Ho narrates the story of her city through scenes of daily life and cultural icons. Hong Kong’s images are more than the skyscrapers by the Victoria Harbour and the bustling scenes of Mong Kok. Hong Kong’s scenery can be focused on the down-to-earth, every day.

 

Karin Weber Gallery is excited to introduce ‘Goodbye, Hello.’, a solo presentation of new prints by Hong Kong artist June Ho.

“Once there was an elephant at Hong Kong’s Lai Yuen Amusement Park, now there are only walls of graffiti that have been whitewashed over; once Hong Kong was a fishing village, now Hong Kong is packed with housing estates; once there were mountains and ancient houses in Hong Kong, now there are railways and high-rises,” observes the artist.

In her thirties, June Ho has not grown up with a historic Hong Kong, but living in this city, navigating its roads, taking in the scenery, watching the movies, have all shaped her perception of the Hong Kong constructed by those before us. This is the Hong Kong she experiences, the city she observes, the place she participates in through her daily life. Hong Kong has long been regarded as a highly urbanised place, but among the many skyscrapers nestles the unique downtown scenery that can only be found here. They could be traces left by changing times or born from the chemistry between a citizen’s lifestyle and the cityscape. Living here, she is experiencing other’s experiences, searching for Hong Kong’s cultural symbols.

In this exhibition of prints, June Ho narrates the story of her city through scenes of daily life and cultural icons. Hong Kong’s images are more than the skyscrapers by the Victoria Harbour and the bustling scenes of Mong Kok. Hong Kong’s scenery can be focused on the down-to-earth, every day.

 

About the Artists

June Ho (b. 1990) graduated from the Fine Arts Department of the Chinese University of Hong Kong. She has been involved in several book projects and has previously shown in Hong Kong, Taiwan and South Korea. Taking inspirations from her personal experiences, the artist condenses and reconstructs familiar and foreign sceneries in everyday life to portray her diaspora identity. Her works often depict the complex feelings of indifference, uncertainty, anxiety and attachment associated to her origin and current place of residence.