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    監製:Diana Wan

    01/10/2025

    Regular viewers may remember that in May we featured the opening concert in the Leisure and Cultural Services Department’s “Hong Kong Artists” series. Well, cellist Alex Lau recently completed a recital in the same series. He’ll be with us later to tell us about that, and about his own musical path. Before we get into classical music though, time for K-pop. The Korean genre has become increasingly popular worldwide over the past couple of decades. Combining pop, hip-hop, electronic dance music, and synchronised choreography, fuelled by social media and an active fan base, K-pop has a following that transcends generations and borders.

    I.F Gallery, which has exhibition spaces in both Singapore and Hong Kong, focuses on introducing modern and contemporary Japanese art to a global audience.
    Currently showing in both spaces, in the concurrent “Between Worlds” exhibitions, are the works of sculptor Akio Ohmori who draws inspiration from nature and mythology to create fanciful animal forms.


    聯絡: wanyt@rthk.hk

    集數

    EPISODES
    • Robert Rauschenberg@M+, Ann Leda Shapiro@Axel Vervoordt & in the studio: singer-songwriter Elly C

      Robert Rauschenberg@M+, Ann Leda Shapiro@Axel Vervoordt & in the studio: singer-songwriter Elly C

      For more than six decades of artistic creation, Robert Rauschenberg worked in a wide variety of mediums, such as painting, sculpture, prints, photography and performance. Now showing at M+ is a major exhibition that highlights Rauschenberg’s connection with Asia.

      "Body is Landscape” at the Axel Vervoordt gallery - Ann Leda Shapiro’s first solo exhibition in Asia - highlights her over-riding interests in social awareness, commitment to care, and the interplay of personal experience and the wider world.

      Singer-songwriter Elly C said writing songs is like a therapy for her. It’s an outlet for her to channel thoughts that she couldn’t talk about with her friends and family. As an independent musician, she also produces her own music. After making music on her own since 2020, she is now collaborating more with other musicians. She’s here to tell us more about her music-making and to bring us one of her early song, “Nobody’s watching”.

      03/12/2025
    • Ancient Egypt Unveiled@HKPM, Sigg Prize 2025@M+ & in the studio: Guzheng player Grammy Yeung

      Ancient Egypt Unveiled@HKPM, Sigg Prize 2025@M+ & in the studio: Guzheng player Grammy Yeung

      On 1st November, the Grand Egyptian Museum (GEM) in Giza had a spectacular three-day opening ceremony in the Giza Plateau in Egypt. After two decades and an estimated cost of US$1.2 billion, the museum finally opens its doors to the public on 4th November. The museum spans nearly 500,000 square metres with more than 100,000 artefacts and is described as the world’s largest archeological museum. Egyptian officials expected the museum to attract up to 8 million visitors a year. Although we might not be able to go to GEM in Giza right now, we are lucky enough to see 250 ancient artefacts from Egypt in a newly opened exhibition at the Hong Kong Palace Museum.

      Now in its third edition, this year’s Sigg Prize is shortlisting six artists. The prize was set up in 2018 with the aim of recognising and promoting the strength and diversity of Chinese artists on an international platform. New and recent works by the six shortlisted creators are on show at The Studio in M+ until 4th January next year.

      Grammy Yeung majored in the guzheng, a Chinese plucked zither in her Masters degree at the Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts. She is also a music major graduate from The University of Hong Kong. On 1st December, she will be having her recital as part of the Leisure and Cultural Services Department’s “Hong Kong Artists” series.
      She is here to tell us more about the programme of the upcoming concert.

      26/11/2025
    • HKADC project: Ding Lab, Stay Connected@Tai Kwun & in the studio: Vocalist Julie May

      HKADC project: Ding Lab, Stay Connected@Tai Kwun & in the studio: Vocalist Julie May

      In August, vocalist, printmaker and painter Julie May came to our studio to talk about the importance of interdisciplinary practices in her work. That chat focused mostly on her music. Today, we’re going to talk to her in more detail about her visual art and printmaking. First though, in 2022, the Hong Kong Arts Development Council launched the Arts∙Tech exhibition series to encourage the public to engage with multi-disciplinary arts. This year’s Arts∙Tech 3 has two installments, the first of which, in June and July, took the form of a lighthouse installation on the observation deck in Ocean Terminal. The second installment, which focuses on urban culture and future developing involves a moving Hong Kong icon, the double-decker tram often colloquially known as the Ding Ding.

      "Stay Connected: Art and China Since 2008” is a two-part exhibition at Tai Kwun JC Contemporary, the first part of which is on show until the 4th January. "Stay Connected: Navigating the Cloud” includes more than 50 works by over 35 artists and groups. They explore the relationship between digital technology, the manufacturing supply chain and human activities, and their impacts on social realties and art in China.

      22/11/2025
    • Quarryside Community Festival, Chao Shao-an 120th@HK Heritage Museum & in the studio: Jonas Cho

      Quarryside Community Festival, Chao Shao-an 120th@HK Heritage Museum & in the studio: Jonas Cho

      The jazz club Chez Trente’s third edition, CT Music Fest is just round the corner. One of the participating musicians is Jonas Cho and his jazz band. He’s here later on the show for a chat to let us know more about it. And to play us a jazz version of a famous Chinese lullaby. But first, let’s talk a walk. In this mostly milder weather, it’s a good time to check out the western section of the East Coast Boardwalk under North Point’s Island Eastern Corridor. Opened early this year, the boardwalk is a beautiful 2.2 km route with a spectacular view of the harbour. It’s divided into two sections, and has many highlights for the public to enjoy, including a community space called “Quarryside”.

      This year is the 120th anniversary of the birth of the master painter Chao Shao-an. The Hong Kong Heritage Museum is currently presenting a retrospective exhibition featuring his much-loved bird-and-flower paintings and including rarely seen works on loan from his family, local museums, and private collectors.

      15/11/2025
    • WMA exhibition: Jess Lau, Xu Longsen@Hanart & in the studio: pianist Niu Niu

      WMA exhibition: Jess Lau, Xu Longsen@Hanart & in the studio: pianist Niu Niu

      Due to light pollution and cloudy weather, it isn’t always so easy to see celestial bodies above Hong Kong, but you do have an opportunity to see and reflect on the stars and their symbolism and meaning at “The Orbit of Hope”, an exhibition organised by the non-profit art platform WMA. Four artists are taking part. We talked to one of them, Jess Lau.

      The exhibition “Misty Aura” at Hanart TZ Gallery features more than 20 large-scale shanshui or landscape paintings painted over the past 12 years by artist Xu Longsen.

      Pianist Niu Niu revisited us in February, just after the Lunar New Year, and spoke to us about his performances of all three of Tchaikovsky’s piano concertos with the Hong Kong Philharmonic Orchestra, one of which resulted in a live album. He also highlighted his plans for the rest of 2025, which included a debut recital in Singapore in August, and a series of concerts in Japan, beginning this month and continuing into November. Niu Niu also told us that one of his goals for this year, apart from performing, is to write more of his own music. While he was with us, he performed one of his original compositions, a piece from his “Weather Suite” called “Sunny Day”.

      05/11/2025
    • 3D ceramics by Silvester Mok, Yukari Nishi@WKM & in the studio: Guitarist Jason Kui

      3D ceramics by Silvester Mok, Yukari Nishi@WKM & in the studio: Guitarist Jason Kui

      Ceramics can be produced using moulds, or by hand-building techniques that include kneading the clay, pinching, coiling, rolling, throwing on a wheel, and slab construction. But one Hong Kong ceramic artist, Silvester Mok, is working with a new technique: 3D printing.

      "In the Meantime” at WKM Gallery is the debut Hong Kong exhibition of Yukari Nishi who describes her process and approach to painting as a form of “collage therapy”.
      The paintings, which present her exploration of the surreal as a place of escape and reflection, reflect her reality and anxiety as a mother.

      Jason Kui is best known for his electrifying guitar playing. A rock and blues musician and composer, his musical range includes modern metal, hard rock, funk and ballads. In September 2022, Kui came to our studio to give us a preview of his two then upcoming concerts: “Six-String Journey to the West”. Music from that show was released as a live album in May this year, and he’s here to tell us more about that, and give us a sneak peek of a new song, due to be released next month.

      29/10/2025
    • Photobooks, Gordon Cheung@gdm & in the studio: Violinist Chow Yip-wai

      Photobooks, Gordon Cheung@gdm & in the studio: Violinist Chow Yip-wai

      There are more than a hundred art galleries in Hong Kong, but only a handful specialise in photography. Recently, a new one opened in Wong Chuk Hang, primarily focusing on photobooks by photographers from around the world, particularly from Japan.

      Currently showcasing at gdm, or Galerie du Monde, is "New Territories", the debut solo exhibition of Gordon Cheung, Featuring both paintings and sculpture, the exhibition explores such themes as colonial history, identity, territory, and sense of belonging, through references to Cheung’s ancestral lineage as well as Hong Kong’s own past and future.

      In June, the Romer String Quartet came to our studio to talk about a concert that focused on Claude Debussy’s only string quartet, composed in 1893. One member, relatively new to the quartet, is violinist Chow Yip-wai. Before joining them, he played with several ensembles in Hong Kong, including the Cong Quartet, Musicus Soloists Hong Kong, and more. As a soloist, Chow is active both in Hong Kong and in the United States. He is also an educator, sharing his love for music with students at the Chinese University of Hong Kong and the West Virginia State University. This Thursday, he’s giving a recital presented by the New Hong Kong Philharmonia. He’s with us now.

      22/10/2025
    • Chan On-yee (Ann Petite), Tsherin Sherpa@Rossi Rossi & in the studio: Erhu player Chu Wan-pin

      Chan On-yee (Ann Petite), Tsherin Sherpa@Rossi Rossi & in the studio: Erhu player Chu Wan-pin

      Across China, even in different ethnic groups, the traditional Chinese two-stringed erhu has long been the most popular instrument in the huqin family of instruments.
      It's still popular today, even in popular music and on film soundtracks. Local movie fans will probably know some of the music by our guest today: erhu player and film composer Chu Wan-pin.

      "Hello Darkness … My Old Friend” is Nepali artist Tsherin Sherpa’s fifth exhibition at the Rossi & Rossi gallery. Sherpa initially studied traditional Tibetan thangka painting with his renowned artist father, Master Urgen Dorje. The exhibition features a series of works, in ink and acrylics, developed from black thangka paintings.

      If you’re a local filmgoer, you’re likely to be familiar with music by our guest today: erhu player and film composer Chu Wan-pin. Apart from his performances of traditional music, Chu is known for scores for feature films such as “Wukong”, “Overheard 3”, “Ne Zha 2” and “The Last Dance”, the latter being chosen as Best Original Film Score at this year’s Hong Kong Film Awards. He’s with us right now.

      15/10/2025
    • Chris Hall@HKPM, Pratchaya Phinthong@Parasite & in the studio:Jon Shen, Nate Wong & Jimmy Pittman

      Chris Hall@HKPM, Pratchaya Phinthong@Parasite & in the studio:Jon Shen, Nate Wong & Jimmy Pittman

      Humans have been collecting objects for centuries, objects as varied as stamps, coins, memorabilia or art. As an activity, collecting combines the thrill of the hunt, nostalgia, sentimental value, the joy of display, the desire for completion, social connection and a sense of community. It can even be a lucrative form of investment. Just ask Chris Hall, who has one of the world’s most extensive collections of Chinese textiles and silks.

      Pratchaya Phinthong is a conceptual artist from Thailand whose works examine subjects such as values, labour and exchange in our everyday interactions, and the complex relationships between materiality, culture and economics. “Empty Set” at Para Site, is Phinthong’s first solo institutional exhibition in Hong Kong.

      Jon Shen’s mother is a violinist, so it may not be so surprising he began leaning the violin and the piano when he was five. By 13, he became interested in the world of pop music and formed a band. Then, at church, he encountered Blues Gospel, in which he gave his first solo concert at 18. After studying jazz at the Berklee College of music, he’s now a singer, pianist, composer and producer, in a range of musical styles. He’s here, with some faces who’ll be familiar to regular viewers of The Works, to introduce his new jazz album

      08/10/2025
    • K-pop cover dance, Akio Ohmori@I.F. Gallery & in the studio: Cellist Alex Lau

      K-pop cover dance, Akio Ohmori@I.F. Gallery & in the studio: Cellist Alex Lau

      Regular viewers may remember that in May we featured the opening concert in the Leisure and Cultural Services Department’s “Hong Kong Artists” series. Well, cellist Alex Lau recently completed a recital in the same series. He’ll be with us later to tell us about that, and about his own musical path. Before we get into classical music though, time for K-pop. The Korean genre has become increasingly popular worldwide over the past couple of decades. Combining pop, hip-hop, electronic dance music, and synchronised choreography, fuelled by social media and an active fan base, K-pop has a following that transcends generations and borders.

      I.F Gallery, which has exhibition spaces in both Singapore and Hong Kong, focuses on introducing modern and contemporary Japanese art to a global audience.
      Currently showing in both spaces, in the concurrent “Between Worlds” exhibitions, are the works of sculptor Akio Ohmori who draws inspiration from nature and mythology to create fanciful animal forms.

      01/10/2025