Hong Kong LGBTQ community gathers for pre-internet-era art show despite storm warning
Black rain couldn’t dampen the mood at ‘Offline Memories’ at Eaton HK, where art and printed images evoke human connections in a bygone era

Even as a black rainstorm warning kept much of Hong Kong indoors on the evening of June 18, an enthusiastic crowd packed into Tomorrow Maybe, the art space at the Eaton HK hotel, to celebrate the opening of “Offline Memories: Hong Kong LGBTQ+ Archive of Printed Matter from the Pre-Internet Era”.
The exhibition is also an invitation to consider the tangible human connections lost in the digital era. It reminds visitors of the physical spaces and printed materials that once anchored the tongzhi circle, tongzhi being a term appropriated from the Mandarin word for “comrade” to refer to members of the LGBTQ community.

The walls are adorned with vintage zines, event fliers and rare photographs of pioneering activists that defined the pre-internet era. These pre-smartphone images are especially precious, as far fewer photos were taken back then. They capture the spirit of a community carving out an identity within the highly restrictive social environment preceding the shockingly late decriminalisation of homosexuality in Hong Kong in 1991.