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Hong Kong Upside Down: photo exhibition shows city in new light

Photographer Tugo Cheng offers a bird’s-eye perpective on city, while Romain Jacquet-Lagrèze captures our vertical city from the ground up, in exhibition to go on show at Chai Wan’s Blue Lotus Gallery

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#99 (2015) from Romain Jacquet-Lagrèze’s “Vertical Horizon” series.
Kylie Knott

Hong Kong’s vastly different rural and city scapes provide a kaleidoscope of inspiration for artists – just ask photographers Tugo Cheng Chun-yeung and Romain Jacquet-Lagrèze, both of whom have a huge fan base in the city. The two have joined creative forces to stage “Hong Kong Upside Down” at the Blue Lotus Gallery, in Chai Wan, from May 6 to June 24, a show that provides glimpses of the city from great (read, giddying) heights.

Hong Kong-born Cheng, an architect by day, takes ordinary places and renders them extraordinary, whether it’s a residential development, industrial building, beach or bridge. In Heatwave (2016), from the “City Patterns” series, Cheng captures the many colours of Shek O beach from above, while Add Oil (2016) gives a bird’s-eye perspective of oil storage tanks.

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Heatwave (2016) from Tugo Cheng’s “City Patterns” series.
Heatwave (2016) from Tugo Cheng’s “City Patterns” series.

“The oil storage tanks at power stations are painted with huge Chinese characters for ‘Oil’ – ‘Add Oil’ is also a typical Hong Kong saying to encourage another person,” explains Cheng.

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