‘Everyone used to think I was a gangster girl’: using art to break down stereotypes
Exhibition in Sham Shui Po features work of ethnic minority teenagers commenting on Hong Kong life
Doel Kulbir stands in front of a photograph she manipulated digitally to feature herself dressed in red sinking into water in the depth of a forest.
“The dress I’m wearing is bright but when you’re in a dark place you’re still drowning,” she says.
Sixteen-year-old Kulbir’s photograph hangs in a newly launched exhibit in Sham Shui Po featuring the work of ethnic minority teenagers reflecting upon Hong Kong life, integration and identity.
“Everyone used to think I was a gangster girl, and I don’t know how that happened, that’s not who I am,” says Kulbir, of the memories this image raises. Kulbir was born in Hong Kong, though her parents hail from Punjab, settling in the fragrant harbour in the ’90s.
In Kwun Tong, which Kulbir and her family call home, gangs get into scuffles near school gates. Kulbir finds herself fighting against the presumption that she affiliates with that particular strain of life as a second-generation ethnic minority youth.
“Many people in Hong Kong don’t know about Indians here, like they don’t know about Pakistanis,” she says, pointing at a picture of a fellow fledgling photographer featuring a young woman in a burka holding the sign that reads: “I am not a terrorist.”
Chow described the need to push for better integration and stronger preventative measures against harassment within schools as a crucial factor in creating a more cohesive and equal society.
The exhibit, featuring the images of 35 students of St Margaret’s school,will be on display at Gallery L0, Jockey Club Creative Arts Centre until January 28. It is the culmination of a project led by youth charity KELY support group and funded by financial services company Moody’s.